Elementary school teachers across Ontario will expand their work-to-rule campaign as of June 1.

According to a confidential memo sent to members, teachers will not participate in any in-school meetings or professional learning activities on the end of the year PA day or the start of the year PA day and will not complete any applications or proposals to the Ministry of Education for special grants or funding. The memo also says that teachers will not book any field trips for the 2015/2016 school year or participate in any grade-to-grade transition meetings.

The work-to-rule campaign, which began on May 11, has already seen teachers refuse to administer standardized tests or add comments to report cards.

“This job action is incremental in nature. This action will continue in effect until the labour dispute is satisfactorily resolved or ETFO’s Provincial Executive deems that further actions are required,” the latest memo from the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario states.

Central talks between the ETFO and the province broke down in late April and then resumed on May 11, only to break down again a few hours later.

In a statement issued on Tuesday morning, ETFO President Sam Hammond chastised the province for refusing to engage in meaningful negotiations.

“I can indicate that there has been no movement at all on the part of the government and OPSBA to contact ETFO or to recommence bargaining. Despite the fact that our ETFO collective agreements expired nine months ago, OPSBA and the Liberal government do not seem interested in reaching a reasonable and fair collective agreement with ETFO," he said.

The announcement of an expanded elementary teachers' work-to-rule campaign comes one day after the province tabled legislation that would order striking teachers in the Durham, Peel and Sudbury school boards to return to work.

At the time, Education Minister Liz Sandals stressed that her government only decided to table the legislation after the Education Relations Commission made it clear that the school year was at risk for the more than 70,000 students in the affected districts.

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