It hasn't been confirmed yet, but there's a very good chance that school support staff will be launching a "work to rule" campaign next week.
CUPE, who represents the 55,000 workers in Ontario schools are in a legal strike position as of Monday, and appear ready to flex their bargaining muscle.
A spokesperson says it's likely there will be disruptions.
The unionized workers are custodians, secretaries and early childhood educators, but it's still not clear what sort of action will be taken.
Laura Walton from CUPE says the province doesn't provide funding to clean some parts of the school, so that's something the custodians will just ignore.
They need to give five days notice before any possible strike or work action, so we'll know tomorrow if the campaign will begin on Monday.
Walton says the members make an average of 38 thousand dollars a year.
The union is claiming that the province is asking for a concession that would hurt students, but they haven't yet said what that could be.