Teachers and education workers across Ontario are preparing for a major Ontario teachers day of action on Wednesday, April 29, 2026, to protest what they describe as chronic underfunding of the province’s education system by the provincial government.
The coordinated event is being organized by five major Catholic and public school worker unions representing more than 255,000 teachers and education workers across the province of Ontario. While participants will still be on the job in classrooms throughout the entire day, they will be making a powerful visual statement by wearing red and purple clothing to demonstrate their collective concern with the province’s latest budget decisions and spending priorities for education.
According to a joint news release issued by the participating unions, the Ontario teachers day of action is designed to draw attention to what educators see as a systematic pattern of inadequate funding that has negatively impacted classrooms, student resources, and the overall quality of education delivered to children across the province, including right here in Durham Region where thousands of dedicated educators serve students in communities every single day.
The decision to hold a day of action rather than a full-scale strike means that students will not lose any instructional time whatsoever. Teachers and education support staff will remain in their classrooms conducting regular lessons and activities exactly as they normally would on any given school day. The only visible difference will be the sea of red and purple clothing worn by educators as they go about their daily teaching responsibilities and interactions with students throughout the school day.
The unions argue that the provincial budget falls significantly short of addressing the growing needs of Ontario’s publicly funded education system. Key concerns raised by the organizing groups include insufficient funding for special education programs, inadequate support for students with diverse learning needs, outdated classroom resources and technology infrastructure, and a general lack of investment in school building maintenance and repair across the province that has left many facilities in need of serious attention.
The Ontario teachers day of action comes at a time of growing tension between the provincial government and education workers across multiple sectors. Recent budget proposals have been heavily criticized by multiple education advocacy groups for failing to keep pace with inflation and the increasing demands placed on the education system by a growing and diversifying student population across Ontario communities both large and small.
Parents and community members are being actively encouraged to show their support for educators by also wearing red or purple on April 29. The unions have emphasized that this day of action is not just about teachers alone but about standing up for the quality of education that all students in Ontario deserve to receive regardless of their background, personal circumstances, or where they happen to live in the province.
Schools in Durham Region and across the entire province are expected to participate in the event, with educators hopeful that the visible display of solidarity will prompt meaningful dialogue with the provincial government about substantially increasing education funding to levels that adequately support student learning outcomes and overall well-being in classrooms everywhere across the province of Ontario.




















