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ACT Education Minister censured by Liberals, Greens as teachers strike

ACT Education Minister censured by Liberals, Greens as teachers strike
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ACT Education Minister Yvette Berry censured in Legislative Assembly as teachers go on strike Thu 11 Jun 2026 at 12:29pm In short: ACT MLA Yvette Berry has been censured by the Canberra Liberals and the ACT Greens over her handling of the education and housing portfolios. The censure took place as ACT teachers go on strike for a day amid negotiations between the union and the government. Ms Berry said she accepted criticism but defended her record as a minister and said she had requested...

ACT Education Minister Yvette Berry censured in Legislative Assembly as teachers go on strike Thu 11 Jun 2026 at 12:29pm In short: ACT MLA Yvette Berry has been censured by the Canberra Liberals and the ACT Greens over her handling of the education and housing portfolios. The censure took place as ACT teachers go on strike for a day amid negotiations between the union and the government. Ms Berry said she accepted criticism but defended her record as a minister and said she had requested reviews into both education and housing. ACT Education Minister Yvette Berry has been censured in the Legislative Assembly amid a teachers' strike that has closed schools across the territory today. Ms Berry was censured this morning in a joint motion brought by the Canberra Liberals and the ACT Greens, who took aim at her handling of the education and housing portfolios. The Australian Education Union (AEU) is locked in an ongoing dispute with the government over a new enterprise agreement, with concerns about staffing and workloads. The industrial action follows a two-hour work stoppage last month, the first such strike action by ACT public school teachers in more than 15 years. Today, Ms Berry defended her record and said she had called for recent reviews into the housing and education portfolios. She also said she was taking a more active role in negotiations with the union, adding she knew teachers were frustrated. 'A sustained record of failure' The joint censure was sparked by concerns over a "sustained record of failure in the vital education and housing portfolios", the two parties said. "For years, teachers, learning support assistants, principals, parents and students have warned that ACT public schools were under increasing pressure,"a joint statement said. "Minister Berry repeatedly insisted the system was performing strongly. The independent ACT Public School System Resourcing Review then exposed the deep and systemic failures across the education system." The statement said the review had shown schools in the ACT were affected by a range of issues including "confusion, inconsistency and poor communication". They also cited "growing administrative burdens pulling teachers out of classrooms, a central office growing faster than schools, widening inequality between schools, rising occupational safety concerns, and inadequate support for students with disabilities and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students". They said Ms Berry's record on housing was "equally concerning". "Ombudsman reports, Auditor-General investigations, a Supreme Court finding that tenants' human rights were breached, and evidence regarding failures in specialist disability accommodation all point to serious and sustained mismanagement within Housing ACT under Labor's watch," the statement said. This morning, Canberra Liberals leader Mark Parton said there had been "continued, repeated failures in the critical portfolios of education and housing". Mr Parton said public schools were under continued pressure and the review revealed there had been widespread failures. "We believe it is well overdue to censure this minister," he said. 'I know that they're angry' Ms Berry told ABC Radio Canberra that she was listening to the concerns of teachers. "I know that they're frustrated, I know that they're angry, I know that they're tired," she said. "I can see it in their faces and I see it when I'm speaking to them. "I know they need to take this action to show the government that they need to be listened to. I want to assure them I am listening." She said she had called for the education review and that she accepted the criticism aimed at the public school system. "I think I'm doing a good job in these portfolios and I have been engaging with stakeholders, particularly over the last couple of weeks, around education and in public housing,"she said. "I've tried to explain to both Mark Parton and [ACT Greens acting leader] Jo Clay on their censure, that of course there's going to be reviews into my work, that's what government's about and it's not there to tick off happy boxes. "It's there to identify gaps and issues and for me and the government to take them on board and respond to those recommendations." She said other jurisdictions were watching how the ACT government responded to the review. "It is such a significant change to our public school system,"she said. "It could never have happened overnight or without the expert advice of a review. "In similar circumstances, the same with housing, I also referred my own directorate to the auditor-general because I was concerned about some of the things that were happening with regards to specialist disability accommodation." Minister taking 'significant' role in negotiations Ms Berry said she had grown up in public housing and attended ACT public schools, and her commitment to both portfolios was "something I've lived and breathed all my life". "It's not always easy and I'm not suggesting at all that I'm perfect, and that's why I accept the criticism," she said. "I know that there needs to be more done, and that's why I take it seriously." She said she had recently taken a more active role in negotiations with the union. "They have been working with the directorate to negotiate a new agreement," she said. "I know that hasn't gone as well as they would have hoped, they haven't had the clarity or certainty that they've required. "I am actually taking a significant role in the negotiation of this agreement." She said there was some "complexity" to the negotiations and a "significant investment" needed to be made into "our schools continuing".
Liberals (ORG) Greens (ORG) Yvette Berry (PERSON) Legislative Assembly (ORG) the Canberra Liberals (ORG) Ms Berry (PERSON) the Legislative Assembly (ORG) The Australian Education Union (ORG) Berry (PERSON) Ms Berry's (PERSON) Auditor-General (ORG) a Supreme Court (ORG) Housing ACT (ORG) Labor (ORG) Canberra (ORG)
Originally published by ABC Australia Read original →