In an open letter addressed to MPs, Féduse, the teachers' union, the ADIL, the union of high school principals, and the CGFP, the civil servants' union, strongly criticised the bill numbered 7662.

The text outlines that future management positions in schools would no longer have to be filled by experienced candidates from the highest civil service level in the state, but also by applicants from the private sector.

The syndicalists believe it is possible to become a director or deputy director without having a minimum professional experience in education, even without adequately mastering the official languages of the country. 
As public education and the status of civil servants have been increasingly undermined in recent years by a systematic and progressive "salami tactic", this bill aims to move even further in the direction of public school degradation and thus privatisation, according to the letter, in which the Chamber is also asked to remove the bill from the agenda.

The Young Greens also oppose the bill in order "to maintain the pedagogical competencies in our school system in the culture of dialogue and school policy," the statement argued.