Concerns are growing over continued uncertainty surrounding whether city council will maintain funding for school librarians in the upcoming school year.
CUPE 5047 President Shelley McNeil is calling on Halifax city councillors to publicly clarify their position before staffing and school planning decisions are affected.
“School librarians are not extras,” said McNeil. “They are part of the learning infrastructure students rely on every single day. Schools and families deserve certainty now — not silence and last-minute decisions about whether these supports will continue.”
The organization says the ongoing lack of confirmation is already creating unnecessary instability for schools attempting to prepare for the next academic year.
“Councillors regularly speak about the importance of literacy, student well-being, and educational success,” said McNeil. “Those commitments have to be reflected in real funding decisions. You cannot claim literacy is a priority while refusing to confirm whether school library services will continue.”
School librarians support students with literacy development, research skills, digital literacy, learning supports, and access to safe and inclusive learning spaces. Advocates warn that destabilizing these services will have real consequences for students and school communities.
“This uncertainty is not neutral anymore,” said McNeil. “Every week council delays confirmation creates more instability for schools, staff, and families. Silence has consequences.”
CUPE 5047 is urging councillors to publicly commit to maintaining school librarian funding for the coming school year and to provide schools with the clarity they need to plan effectively.
“If councillors believe school libraries matter, now is the time to say so clearly,” said McNeil. “Students should not be left wondering whether these supports will still exist in September.”