EDMONTON — Alberta teachers are taking Premier Danielle Smith’s government to court for passing a law to end their strike and for using the Charter’s notwithstanding clause to do it.
Jason Schilling, head of the Alberta Teachers’ Association, says the union has filed an application asking for a judge to immediately pause the law until a full constitutional challenge is heard.
Schilling says the province’s use of the notwithstanding clause is invalid, unconstitutional and stops courts from doing their job.
He says the law violates teachers’ rights to freedom of association and expression and, if left unchallenged, sets a dangerous precedent that could be used against other workers and citizens.
The clause allows governments to override certain Charter rights, but it must be renewed ever

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