Federal Budget 2012: Women’s rights suffer significant setbacks under Harper majority

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May 8, 2012 02:56 PM

Federal Budget 2012: Women’s rights suffer significant setbacks under Harper majority

The federal government promised that one of the priorities of the federal budget budget would be “supporting families and communities”. Unfortunately, the Harper Conservatives have failed miserably on this front, especially when it comes to the women and girls of Canada.

Women continue to face a number of challenges in the labour force. Women rely heavily on public services. They often hold precarious jobs, with less pay than their male counterparts. A lack of affordable, quality child care also places an extra burden on mothers of young children. Senior women are among the poorest in the country.

OAS and GIS cuts

By increasing the age of eligibility to the Old Age Security pension (OAS) and the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) the Harper Conservative government has directly targeted senior women. Women are the majority of claimants for GIS, due to the fact that women are disadvantaged during their active working lives. Low pay and precarious work mean many women have little or no ability to save or build up decent pensions during their working lives, so many must rely on OAS for retirement income. For women aged 65-69 the OAS/GIS represent 38 per cent of their income, while for men it represents 26 per cent. Forcing poor senior women who are already disadvantaged in the workplace to work longer is shameful and wrong.

No child care

This budget did absolutely nothing to address the dire need to establish a national child care program. One of the key factors to preventing child poverty and stimulating the Canadian economy is for women and mothers to be active participants in the workforce. While many women participate in the paid workforce, mothers of young children (12 and under) are unemployed or underemployed because they have no affordable, quality care for their children. But instead of supporting working mothers, this government offers meager payouts for families with young children, covering only a fraction of the cost of child care for most Canadian families.

Child care comes at an initial cost to the government, but provides significant returns through increased tax revenues. Investment in child care virtually pays for itself. At the same time investment in child care creates jobs. Child care investments in Quebec have pumped an additional $5.2 billion into the Quebec economy. Plus, earnings from increased employment send 90 cents in tax revenues back to federal and provincial governments for every dollar invested.

The federal government must build high-quality, affordable, inclusive and publicly delivered early childhood education and care services across Canada, with equitable access for all children and families. The market-based system we now have clearly does not work.

Cuts to services and jobs

Cuts to federal services and jobs download problems onto provinces, many of which are in the process of cutting their own public programs and services as well. These cuts affect women first and foremost, and hurt those who can least afford it.

Health services at the Assembly of First Nations, the Metis National Council, the Inuit, the Native Women’s Association of Canada, and other organizations that support Aboriginal peoples have been cut dramatically or eliminated altogether. Aboriginal women suffer from much higher rates of poverty and violence than the rest of the population. Cutting these services puts this already vulnerable group at even greater risk.

Supposedly aimed at creating jobs, this budget actually does the opposite by eliminating decent jobs for women across the country. The majority of federal employees (55 per cent) are women. CUPE’s wage analysis study, Battle of the Wages: Who gets paid more private of public sector workers?, showed that the pay gap for women in the public sector is much smaller than it is in the private sector because of pay equity initiatives. The public sector delivers valuable services to women and is also a source of equitable employment, but during Harper’s tenure our ability to achieve pay equity in federal jurisdictions has effectively been eliminated.

Tax cuts for rich corporations

Continued corporate tax cuts are a gender-biased initiative that benefit shareholders, top executives, and foreign corporations. Not only do corporate tax cuts primarily benefit men, but the lost revenue from keeping corporate taxes low impairs access to critical services that primarily benefit women.

Women’s share of income and wealth in the corporate sector are negligible; just 10 per cent of directors in the top 500 corporations are women, and just 17 per cent of management positions are held by women. Women own a paltry 30 per cent of corporate shares.

This federal budget has done nothing to improve the lives of women and girls. For many, it has made life worse. We need a federal presence to achieve equality for women, not abandon it.

‘Opening up Government’ Proving a False Promise in BC

 

Province’s info and privacy chief criticizes three bills. ‘Pattern’ shuts out citizens, says watchdog group.

By Andrew MacLeod, Yesterday, TheTyee.ca

Premier Clark swearing-in ceremony

Christy Clark, here being sworn in as BC premier, has stated, "We are working to make B.C. the most open provincial government in Canada."

 

Premier Christy Clark portrays herself as a champion of open government, but after her first year in office the government she leads appears to be attacking the law that governs how information can and can’t be shared in the province.

"This is starting to be a pattern," said Vincent Gogolek, the executive director of the watchdog group Freedom of Information and Privacy Association. "This is a huge grab. It’s a power grab. We should be concerned as citizens and the legislators should be concerned."

Last week the province’s Information and Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham wrote three letters to different cabinet ministers criticizing bills the Clark government has introduced to the legislature for debate.

The bills cover topics as diverse as animal health, the PharmaCare drug program and the rights of emergency responders. In all three cases Denham has questioned how the bills contradict and in some cases override the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, a law adopted 20 years ago with the unanimous support of MLAs.

The FIPPA balances the public’s right to know what their government is doing with other considerations including people’s right to privacy and the need to keep certain information confidential, Denham said in an interview.

"The balance in the statutes has long been established and it should only be altered after thorough public consultation and discussion," she said. "In my view the government has not looked thoroughly enough at the existing law and communicated to the public why the existing balance isn’t going to work."

She said she doesn’t see her concerns about the three pieces of legislation as a trend, but added, "These are fundamental rights of British Columbians, personal privacy and access to information."

Families first and open government

It’s sharp criticism for a premier who along with the jobs plan and "families first" has made "opening up government" one of her flagship policies. The BC Liberal Party website sums up Clark and the government’s focus this way: "Standing up for B.C.’s diverse families, focusing on good jobs in the private sector and opening up government."

In a 2011 year-end report, Clark said, "Open Government is about giving people a sense of confidence that government is working for them, not trying to do something to them… We are working to make British Columbia the most open provincial government in Canada."

The site counts as successes the establishment of an auditor general’s office for local government, the release of 2,700 data sets and the posting of quarterly reports via webcast.

The government’s recent bills, however, seem to be moving in the opposite direction. The Tyee reported last week that Commissioner Denham had written to Health Minister Michael de Jong on May 1 about the Pharmaceutical Services Act to say she has "concerns about the reduced transparency of government’s decision-making and the infringement of personal privacy that will result from this Bill."

Much of the bill leaves details to be set by regulation, which in an interview Denham said is "a concern because the public doesn’t know how the minister of health is going to collect or use information that’s in PharmaNet."

The minister has said the intent is to make it easier for medical researchers to use data from PharmaCare, with information that identifies individuals removed, to do work that could improve care and health. But Denham said section 35 of the FIPPA already allows disclosure for research purposes and adds that as long as privacy is protected, "I think there should be more medical research, not less medical research."

The government could either include in the act the detail of what it intends to do, or leave it to be governed by the FIPPA which already does the job, she said.

Salmon farm data released over gov’t objections

Two days after writing de Jong, she wrote to Agriculture Minister Don McRae with concerns about the Animal Health Act and to Labour, Citizens’ Services and Open Government Minister Margaret MacDiarmid asking her to withdraw the Emergency Intervention Disclosure Act.

The Animal Health Act would "remove the public’s right to access various records regarding animal testing, including actions and reports relating to animal disease management," Denham wrote.

The move seemed to be a response to a 2010 order the commissioner made for the ministry to release the results of random audits related to the presence of disease on salmon farms, she said. The T. Buck Suzuki environmental organization had requested sea lice data and information about other pathogens on fish farms that the government fought against releasing.

"This is a matter of deep concern considering the importance of disease management measures, and the need for openness and accountability in the monitoring and enforcement of such measures," Denham wrote. "Though it may be in the interest of your ministry and of farmers to protect test data in the ministry’s possession from disclosure, it is not clear how the public policy interests carefully balanced in FIPPA are served by a blanket override of this nature."

Finding privacy balance

Denham’s concerns with Bill 39, the Emergency Intervention Disclosure Act, were slightly different, though they fit the pattern of a change in how the government balances privacy with the release of information.

The bill would allow police officers, firefighters and paramedics who may come into contact with other people’s bodily fluids to get a legal order compelling a person to provide a sample for testing if one is not given voluntarily.

"Bill 39 subjects individuals to a process of looking for disease that is highly privacy invasive while providing little to no demonstrable benefit to the emergency responder," wrote Denham to MacDiarmid.

"Removing an individual’s right to control their bodily integrity is the most intrusive form of privacy infringement," she said. "Any initiative that limits this right must strike a balance between the reasonableness of restricting an individual’s liberties with the commensurate need to infringe them. I do not see such a balance with Bill 39."

While Denham acknowledged it’s been a busy time with so many bills coming forward and only 12 sitting days left before the legislature recesses for the summer, she said she looks at each bill separately.

"From my point of view there are problems with these three pieces of legislation," she said in an interview. "I don’t think there’s an overall trend. From my point of view I have a problem with three pieces of legislation that happen to be before the House at the same time."

The commissioner’s office can and does review legislation for the government before it comes to the House. Denham said confidentiality prevents her from saying whether her office consulted on the current legislation, but said, "Our comments on previous legislation have been considered and the government has made amendments based on my comments."

A government official said all three pieces of legislation had been reviewed by Denham’s office before they were introduced.

‘A matter of basic democracy’: FIPA

FIPA’s Gogolek said there does seem to be a pattern of legislation being brought to the House that’s at odds with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. "We have a number of different ministers following the same approach," he said. "That’s three different ministers heading down this road. I don’t think they got there independently."

Even with FIPPA it can be hard to get information out of the government, he said. Delays are common, and his organization has been fighting to get records on one request for more than seven years, for example.

"It’s really getting to the point you have to wonder if they’re unhappy that it’s working at all," he said. "Essentially every piece of legislation seems to have this sort of [override] provision in it now."

FIPPA enshrines in law the public’s right to know what the government is doing, and defines under what circumstances information can be withheld. "If you have rights the government can unilaterally suspend, you don’t have any rights," he said. "This is a matter of basic democracy."

It’s sneaky to erode FIPPA’s reach the way the government is with sections buried in other acts, he said. "If the government has a problem with the principles [of the FIPPA], they should have that debate in the legislature," he said.

NDP sees ‘bad pattern’

Minister MacDiarmid said that the government has respect for Commissioner Denham, and that the ministers responsible for each piece of legislation should be the ones to talk about the provisions in each.

"Freedom of information and protection of privacy is important to us and we know it’s important to British Columbians as well," she said.

She denied that creating exceptions to the FIPPA is an indication that the government dislikes having to comply with the act. "We have very strong legislation and we do have a good relationship with the commissioner as well," she said.

Asked about the perception that the government appears to be deliberately attacking FIPPA, she said, "I think that’s a misrepresentation of what’s happening."

NDP MLA Doug Routley, the critic for open government, said there’s a "bad pattern" in the three pieces of legislation.

"It flies in the face of the open government commitment," he said, a problem compounded by the speed with which the bills are being made into law that allows little time to consult stakeholders. "When it comes to the real making of government policy… there’s zero consultation."

The NDP agrees with the general intent of all three acts, but has concerns about the sections that affect privacy and freedom of information, he said. The party may propose amendments to them when the time comes during debate, he said.

He said he agrees with Denham’s criticisms of the bills, and that the FIPPA has provided a clear framework for access to information. "The problem isn’t with the legislation, the perceived proscriptive nature of the legislation, it’s with the lack of understanding of how to apply the legislation," he said.  [Tyee]

Employers Must Provide Members Email Addresses to Union Rules BC Labour Board

http://www.bcfederationist.com

CAW Local 114 and UFCW Local 1518 were involved in a significant victory on a recent reconsideration case at the BC Labour Relations Board involving Viking Air and CAW Local 114.

At issue in the case was whether or not a provincially regulated employer was required to turn over email addresses in its possession to the Union upon request and whether or not this right was inherent in the BC Labour Relations Code or something that had to be bargained by unions at each negotiating table.

The CAW filed the complaint against Viking Air when it moved to a paperless pay stub system and required all employees to provide an email address for this purpose. The CAW took the position that the Union should be on an equal footing with the Employer with respect to employee contact information and that this right should not be constrained by a bare necessity approach but instead should be broadly interpreted.

CAW Local 114 had been successful in achieving a ruling that email address should be provided to the Union in a decision involving Port Transport in 2011 (BCLRB No. B50/2011). Incredibly, the same Vice-Chair at the LRB ruled against the Union in the original Viking Air case only a few months later when he found that email addresses did not have to be provided to the Union (BCLRB No. B18/2012).

The CAW filed an appeal of the original Viking Air decision and approached Brother Jim Sinclair to put the word out to other unions to join with us in fighting on this important issue, particularly given the changes in technology and our members’ preferred methods of communication.

UFCW Local 1518 intervened and filed a brief in support of the CAW application with the BC Labour Relations Board.

The BC Labour Relations Board issued its reconsideration decision on April 25, 2012, overturning the original decision and ruling unanimously in favour of the Union (BCLRB No. B87/2012).

As a result, all provincially regulated employer’s in BC must now provide not only names, addresses and phone numbers to any union upon request, but also must also provide email addresses of members if it collects them, as long as the information can be easily supplied and the employer does not have a sound business reason to refuse to provide the information. Viking Air’s attempted reliance on BC privacy legislation was also dismissed as a bar to provision of this information.

We believe that this decision is one of the first in Canada to deal explicitly with the issue of email addresses, and the highest decision from any labour board on this issue to date. We believe this decision is a major step forward into the twenty-first century in the labour movement’s ability to represent and communicate with our members.

Cooperation and solidarity between unions is essential as workers continue to come under attack from ruthless employers and right-wing governments

Tough on crime? Not when it comes to workplace deaths

http://www.bcfederationist.com

At 5:18 am on Saturday, May 9, 1992 the Westray coal mine in Plymouth Nova Scotia exploded killing all 26 miners who were underground at the time. 15 bodies were eventually recovered but 11 still remain underground as the mine was sealed after repeated extraction attempts proved too dangerous. This tragic and preventable incident devastated the Atlantic communities where the miners and their families lived and these communities have never recovered.

The company that owned and operated the mine, Curragh Resources, knowingly ignored safety protocols and procedures, removed safety training and equipment and exhibited criminal negligence towards mines inspections even after several incidents of roof collapse prior to the horrific events of May 9th. After the incident several letters and statements from concerned union officials and politicians were shown to warn that unless immediate action was taken to address the high concentrations of coal dust something terrible would happen. Unfortunately all these warnings and indicators went unheeded or ignored by the company and disaster ensued.

Dozens of charges against the company, mine managers and owners were put forth by the crown in the aftermath of the disaster. All of these charges were eventually stayed or dropped for various reasons and the company owner and president even refused to even participate in the subsequent inquiry. Because of this injustice and failure of successful prosecution the Canadian labour movement through the Canadian Labour Congress and its affiliates (USW had an organizing drive at the mine at the time of the disaster) lobbied and campaigned the Federal government to amend the criminal code of Canada and create provisions under it to be able to charge employers and managers that knowingly put their employees into deadly dangerous situations. This piece of legislation became known as Bill C-45 and was enacted as section 217.1 of the criminal code of Canada in 2003. It states: “Every one who undertakes, or has the authority, to direct how another person does work or performs a task is under a legal duty to take reasonable steps to prevent bodily harm to that person, or any other person, arising from that work or task.”

20 years after this tragic incident it is important to reflect on the impact that this disaster had, if the subsequent legislation is being used in a meaningful way and if Canadian workers are indeed any safer than they were 20 years ago?

This statistic helps put the situation into prospective. In 1993 there were 758 recognized workplace fatalities in Canada. In 2010 there were 1014 recognized workplace fatalities in Canada. Clearly our workplaces are not any safer than they were 20 years ago. In regards to the amendments of the criminal code and the provisions of Bill C-45 Canada has only had 6 prosecutions under this law.

In some instances, such as the death of USW member Lyle Hewer in November 2004 at the Weyerhaeuser mill in New Westminster, the RCMP actually said that criminal charges should be laid and the crown refused to prosecute even after the USW proved through private prosecution that there were grounds for charges of criminal negligence.

This week also marks the start of the inquest into the death of 3 workers at the A-1 Mushroom farm in Langley that also left two workers permanently in a vegetative state. The owners were fined $350,000.00 but no jail time. They will likely never pay these fines as they have claimed bankruptcy.

Laws are on as good as the paper that they are written on unless they are enforced and criminally negligent employers are charged as the intent of the legal changes made in the wake of the Westray disaster. To not do so is an insult to the memory of the 26 miners who died 20 years ago.

- Brian Campbell

Canada Income Inequality And The Decline Of Unions: Have We Passed A Point Of No Return?

Rachel Mendleson

Rachel Mendleson Rachel.Mendleson@huffingtonpost.com

 

ST. THOMAS, Ont. — If there is any doubt that the erosion of unions could be contributing to the decline of the middle class — and, by extension, Canada’s growing rich-poor divide — consider Shane MacPherson’s career prospects.

When MacPherson stepped onto the line at the Ford Motor Co. assembly plant in St. Thomas, Ont., in the mid-’90s, he counted himself among the lucky ones. After decades of deterioration, good factory jobs had grown scarce, and, as the son of a Ford worker, MacPherson took comfort in knowing he would be able to provide his family with the same financial security his parents had given him.

"It was like, ‘You’re here. You’re not switching jobs. This is it,’ says MacPherson, whose sense of security grew even more when his wife got a job at Ford. "We weren’t going to worry about the things that some people worry about."

Of course, all that changed in 2009, when the beleaguered Detroit firm announced it was closing the plant in St. Thomas, vaporizing 1,000 jobs and pulling the rug out from under MacPherson’s vision for the future.

"I’ve been looking for a job for over a year and a half — and it’s not happening," says the 35-year-old father of three, who will be removed from Ford’s callback list at the end of the month. "Me and my wife realize that life’s going to be completely different than what we imagined it was going to be."

More on income inequality at Mind The Gap: Which Provinces Have The Widest Income Gap?.. 11 Products And Services For The Super-Rich.. Calgary’s Energy Boom Masks A Growing Gap.. FULL COVERAGE..

MacPherson’s struggle is a reminder of the gaping hole in the labour market that unionized jobs once occupied.

"Unions are a major force for greater income equality at the national and local level," says Stephanie Ross, a labour expert at York University. "Through collective bargaining, they basically turn bad jobs into better jobs; into jobs that have a decent wage that can sustain a certain standard of living."

So it should come as no surprise that the diminishing capacity of organized labour appears to be having the opposite effect.

According to a recent Harvard University study, the disintegration of unions has been a significant factor in the growth in income inequality in the United States. Using data from the Current Population Survey, researchers decomposed the growth in hourly wages inequality for private sector workers from 1973 to 2007, when union membership plummeted from 34 per cent to 8 per cent. They concluded that the decline of organized labour explains a fifth to a third [of] the growth in inequality — an effect comparable to the stratification of wages by education.

Though the trend has not been as pronounced in Canada, experts say the fallout has been similar.

According to Craig Riddell, a labour economist at the University of British Columbia, in recent decades, fully 20 per cent of the growth in income inequality among Canadian men can be attributed to the decline in union density. The link, he says, is particularly apparent in the private sector, where the drop-off has been most pronounced.

For better or worse, observers tend to chalk up the decline of unions — and many of the industries where labour was once strongest — to some combination of a changing world economy, competition from cheap imports and the unsustainable nature of big unions themselves.

But for those born and raised to work on the line, the implications of this particular aspect of the growing income gap are more than an abstraction. As a gulf opens up between their expectations and reality, their sense of community and personal identity hangs in the balance.

"We don’t go and get a big education and move to Toronto for the big jobs," says Ron Drouillard, a fourth-generation Ford worker who was laid off in 2007 when the company announced it was closing a Windsor, Ont., plant.

"[People] go into the factory when they’re 18 or 19, and that’s their sacrifice, that’s their education. It’s going to take a toll on their bodies and they’re going to die a little bit younger, but that’s going to provide a better life for their kids. This is what we do," he says, pausing briefly before correcting himself. "Well, it’s what we did."

According to Jim Stanford, chief economist for the Canadian Auto Workers’ union, the role labour organizations played in smoothing out income disparity in the 20th century cannot be overstated.

"There’s no inherent reason in any profession or in any industry why middle class jobs would normally be produced by the market economy," he says. "Middle class jobs are a creation of deliberate efforts to lift standards, and unions are the most important of those efforts."

Peter Temin, an expert in economic history at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, sees it somewhat less starkly. Noting that the rise of unions during the 1930s occurred alongside a host of other redistributive public policies, he says they have been more significant in maintaining equality than creating it.

"Income inequality was reduced a lot in the Second World War, and the unions preserved it for a generation," he says.

But either way, it’s clear that there’s something about unions that is conducive to flattening the income distribution — and not just for those who pay membership dues.

For all of Big Labour’s shortcomings, the evidence is ample that the collective agreements negotiated by union bosses tend to bid up wages throughout the entire sector, as management strives to retain employees and discourage unionization.

At the same time, studies have shown that in industrialized nations, high union density often accompanies a variety of other equalizing measures, including progressive taxation and robust labour laws.

Within unionized shops, says Riddell, unions have tended to lift the earnings of those at the bottom and compress incomes at the top — an equalizing effect that is most pronounced in the kind of private sector unions where the decline has been concentrated.

"You had a lot of unskilled, and semi-skilled workers whose wages moved up into earnings that put them into the middle class, so you had a much more homogeneous society, income-wise, than you would have otherwise had," Riddell says of auto towns like St. Thomas and Windsor.

For many in those cities, generations of relatively solid pay, benefits and job security engendered an almost institutionalized belief in the promise of landing a union gig.

As Drouillard points out, when he was in his final year of high school, his vice-principal reminded him that the Big Three were hiring.

"He was questioning me, ‘Why are you still here?’ " recalls the 37-year-old, who started at Ford in the mid-’90s. "They pressured you to go [because] that’s the best job you’ll ever get. If you’re going to live in this community, quit school and go to the factory. That was normal."

Which could explain why these plants became communities all their own.

"One of the neatest things was that we had our own hockey league, not just a hockey team," says MacPherson. "We had our own league with just our plant."

Michelle Gleeson, who was a second-generation Ford worker in St. Thomas, also describes a culture of togetherness.

"It wasn’t the drone syndrome, where you just go to work and you’re like a robot," she says. "It was more like a family, and I loved that."

The auto workers in Windsor and St. Thomas say they always suspected on some level that their jobs wouldn’t last forever — and this fear was not unwarranted. Even before the recession, Canada’s auto industry was falling of the cliff, shedding a staggering 56,000 jobs from 2004 to 2008.

As the rumours became harder to ignore, the threat of shutdown gnawed away at the ties forged on the factory floor and in the union hall.

"It’s almost like [we] couldn’t take out their anger or their power on the employer anymore so it just kind of turned on ourselves," says Drouillard.

But animosity soon gave way to grief.

"There was obviously a big sense of loss," says Dennis McGee, president of CAW Local 1520, which represents Ford workers in St. Thomas. "[It's like] you’ve lost a family member."

WEARING DOWN THE UNION LABEL

In a recent report on deepening income disparity, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) noted that, in Canada, more than 40 per cent of the increase in inequality since the 1980s can be attributed to the "rising gap in men’s earnings."

"Employment is the most promising way of tackling inequality," the OECD maintained. "The biggest challenge is creating more and better jobs that offer good career prospects and a real chance for people to escape poverty."

But as labour share’s of GDP falls and corporate profits increase, it’s difficult to see where those jobs will come from, or what role unions might play in this effort.

Whereas the Great Depression ushered in a progressive political atmosphere that was conducive to the rise of unions and the redistribution of income, the recent recession has left a very different legacy in its wake.

In the private sector, experts say that the passage of restrictive laws around union organizing and shifting employer attitudes are making it tough for unions to lay down roots, particularly in the growing service sector.

Unlike big plants, which contained hundreds of full-time employees under the same roof, restaurants and retail outlets tend to be staffed by temporary and part-time workers scattered over many locations.

"It’s been very difficult for unions to organize the Walmarts, and not just because Walmart goes out of its way to prevent unionization," says Riddell. "Even when unions have made some in-roads, they’ve either not been able to get a first collective agreement or survive."

Despite repeated organizing drives, a Walmart in Weyburn, Sask., is the only unionized location in North America.

At the same time, as governments trumpet the virtues of austerity and push privatization as a means to trim the fat, public sector unions — the last stronghold of organized labour in Canada — are increasingly coming under attack, as the threat of cutbacks loom everywhere from city hall to Parliament Hill.

In the U.S., observers often cite the infamous Reagan-era firing of 11,000 striking air traffic controllers as the moment the tide turned against unions.

On this side of the border, Dalhousie University economist Lars Osberg says the Harper government’s swift intervention in the recent Canadian Union of Postal Workers and Air Canada labour disputes may one day be seen as a similar turning point.

"If you want a direct indicator of the political power of unions," he says, "that’s an indicator."

But however the labour market adjusts to the New World Order, it seems unlikely that the kind of work that once powered southern Ontario will ever return to the same extent, forcing legions of laid-off factory employees to ponder a tough choice: settle for less, or move somewhere else.

Meanwhile, in St. Thomas, the death rattle of CAW Local 1520 is taking place in a rented space at a nondescript strip mall a few minutes from the plant, where the union and government have funded an "action centre" for workers to spruce up their resumes, peruse job boards and find support in one another.

Since selling the old union hall a few months ago, the action centre has also become a kind of makeshift memorial. Framed portraits of the CAW’s top brass and a photo of a Crown Victoria, the car that used to be built here, hang on the grey walls. Behind the door in his office, McGee has stacked several plaques marking significant milestones in the local’s 44-year history.

As McGee explains, the plaques used to be mounted in concrete at the union hall, but are too heavy to hang.

The assembly plant is still impossible to miss from Highway 4, but the massive employee parking lot that extends to the road’s edge now sits empty.

"I hate driving by there," says MacPherson, who passes the plant on a daily basis. "I just try not to look."

B.C. paramedics could see radical job change with Bill 48

BY PAMELA FAYERMAN, VANCOUVER SUN : Tuesday, May 08, 2012 12:00 AM

The scope of paramedics’ work would be expanded to include such duties as triaging patients in emergency situations where no doctors or nurses are available, under legislation introduced in B.C. Monday.

Bill 48 would pave the way for paramedics to work in more emergency health care situations and facilities, especially when their skills are needed in extraordinary or catastrophic situations.

Nikki Sieben, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Health, said the Emergency and Health Services Amendment Act, if passed, would enable the province to temporarily hire paramedics from other jurisdictions in the event of a disaster.

As well, B.C. paramedics might be used in rural and remote areas of the province to both triage (assess) and transport emergency patients when there are no doctors or nurses available to do that work in small communities.

Sieben said an expanded scope of practice for paramedics still has to be discussed, not only with paramedics, but all other health professionals in the province.

While the act does contain sections that would broaden the use of paramedics, it is mostly designed to change the organizational and legal structure of the B.C. ambulance agency as it brings emergency health services into the fold of the Provincial Health Services Authority. Instead of being a separate agency, BC Ambulance would become part of the PHSA organization.

 
Michael MacDougall, a former senior official in the ministry, was recently appointed president of a new entity to be called BC Emergency Health Services (BCEHS).

MacDougall will be responsible for BC Ambulance as well as for consolidating lab medicine and pathology services throughout the Lower Mainland.

“Bill 48 allows for closer cooperation between BCEHS and health authorities in improving patient safety and quality of care,” the government said in a press release.

“This change recognizes the important role played by paramedics and first responders in overall patient care and reinforces the fact that ambulance services are often the first point of contact.”

Health Minister Mike de Jong said the legislation will result in a more efficient system.

There are 3,500 paramedics in B.C. Their union did not have a comment Monday as representatives had not yet read the draft legislation.

© Shaw Media Inc., 2012. All rights reserved.

RSMC Negotiations: CUPW Presents Global Offer

May 8, 2012  -  17:30

RSMC Negotiations 2012 / Bulletin

2012 RSMC Negotiations Bulletin No. 10

Yesterday the CUPW RSMC National Negotiating Committee presented Canada Post with a Global Offer for Settlement. The Union’s offer is a comprehensive proposal which includes collective agreement language on all of the issues in dispute.

Central to our proposal is the Union’s demand for full equality with the terms and conditions that exist in the collective agreement which covers Urban Operations employees including wages, benefits, rights and working conditions.

Key Provisions in the Union’s Global Offer include:

Wages: The wage proposal provides for a national wage scale identical to that for letter carriers as determined by the back to work legislation. The maximum wage rates are as follows:

       January 1, 2012:      $24.57 per hour

       February 1, 2012:     $24.94 per hour

       February 1, 2013:     $25.44 per hour

       February 1, 2014:     $25.95 per hour

The Union rejects CPC’s proposal for regional rates. Employees whose hourly rate exceeds those in the Urban agreement shall continue to receive their hourly rate until such a time as the negotiated national pay exceeds their rate of pay or until their route is restructured under the time values with the inclusion of the meal and rest periods. Red circled employees shall receive a lump sum payment of 1% of their current salaries on January 1st of each year.

Cost of Living Allowance (COLA): The COLA will be effective on February 1, 2012 and trigger after the Consumer Price Index increases 5.5% more than its level as of January 2012.

Hours of Work: Employees shall be paid for all hours of work with overtime rates paid at either time and a half (1½ ) or double (2) time as appropriate. The entitlement to paid meal periods and 15 minute paid rest periods shall be the same as those included in the Urban Operations collective agreement. The half-hour paid meal period and rest periods will be applied immediately to all routes for the purposes of pay and shall be included in the calculation of work time.

Time Values and Restructures: All routes will be restructured based on new time values which have been proposed by the Union and which cover all aspects of RSMC work based on an eight-hour (8) day. There shall be an agreed upon schedule for the restructures, with a minimum of 20% of routes to be restructured by January 31, 2013, another 40% by January 31, 2014, and the rest prior to the expiry of the collective agreement. The rules for restructures, including the Union’s rights to participate and observe will be the same as under the Urban Operations agreement. Routes shall be selected by seniority.

Benefits: The following benefits shall apply:

  • The long term disability plan (LTD) which is available to other employees at Canada Post.

  • Yearly updates to the dental fee guide.

  • All permanent employees shall be entitled to the drug plan and the rest of the extended health care plan (EHCP).

The Union rejects the Employer’s proposal for a defined contribution pension plan for new hires.

Vacation Leave: Effective January 1, 2012 all employees shall be entitled to four weeks of paid vacation upon completion of seven (7) years of service.

Paid Sick Leave: Include a program of paid of sick leave. Employees shall accumulate sick leave credits at the rate of one and one quarter (1¼) days per month.

Injury on Duty Leave: Employees on injury on duty leave to receive pay equal to 100% of the regular wages under rules identical to the Urban Operations collective agreement.

Uniforms: The uniform entitlement shall be the same as that of the letter carriers as provided for in the Urban Operations agreement.

Technological Change and Job Security: No lay off of any employee who was employed as of January 1, 2012 or employees hired after January 1, 2012 who have five years of service. These employees may be required to be relocated up to 40 kilometres. Other employees shall not be laid off provided they are prepared to relocate to an available vacancy. Provisions of guaranteed employment, pay, and classification and provisions for retraining and a displacement allowance shall apply in cases of technological change.

Corporate Provided Vehicles: CPC to provide corporate-owned right hand drive vehicles to all routes that provide service to more than 50 rural mailboxes per hour or a total of 185 or more rural mailboxes per day. There shall be a process to require CPC to provide vehicles to other RSMCs in addition to those servicing rural mail boxes.  CPC shall be responsible for all costs associated with Corporate vehicles. Employees who have recently entered into a lease or loan agreement for their vehicle shall be given the option of delaying the implementation until their lease or loan arrangement has expired. All special allowances shall continue.

Vehicle Allowance: Employees shall receive the maximum CRA rate for their vehicle allowance.

Rights to Union Representation: Union representatives shall have access to the workplace in the same manner that applies to other bargaining units. Union stewards shall have the right to communicate with employees and prepare and present grievances during their hours of work without loss of pay.

Relief Employees: RSMCs shall no longer have the obligation to provide their own replacements. CPC shall be responsible for hiring relief employees and for covering all absences. There shall be a minimum of 1 permanent relief employee per installation or group of installations with 12 routes. If additional relief employees would have been required more than sixty-five per cent of the preceding 12 months an additional position will be established. On-Call Relief Employees (OCREs) will be available to cover other absences. One On-Call Relief Employee (OCREs) will be hired in offices of 1-6 routes and 2 OCREs will be hired for offices of 7-11 routes. Permanent relief employees shall have the same rights as RSMC route holders.

Rights of On-Call Relief Employees (OCREs): The rights of OCREs shall be improved and included in the collective agreement.

Admail: The payments, time values and rules of delivery for admail shall be standardized. The rate of payment shall be 2.3 cents per piece with a maximum weight of 230 grams, 4.0 cents up to 500 grams, 5.0 cents for pieces of a width between 6 and 9 inches. Oversized admail shall be paid at 10.0 cents up to 1000 grams and 15.0 cents up to 2000 grams.

It’s Time for Equality

Everyone in the postal service knows that the work of RSMCs requires the same levels of skill, effort and responsibility as that of Urban Operations workers. Canada Post must acknowledge its legal and moral responsibility to provide pay equity to RSMCs. Your Negotiating Committee is working hard to explain to the employer why our demands are just, reasonable and necessary. In order to convince management we will need the active support of all RSMCs. The time for equality is now.

In solidarity,
Donald Lafleur
4th National Vice-President and Chief Negotiator

Community health talks adjourn until May 28

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May 3, 2012

After three weeks of talks, the Community Bargaining Association (CBA) and the Health Employers’ Association of British Columbia (HEABC) have adjourned until May 28.

During negotiations this week, the two parties discussed issues and exchanged amendments to previously tabled proposals. The CBA tabled counter-proposals related to union rights.

HEABC tabled a health and safety proposal and provided the CBA bargaining committee with a presentation on the Disability Management Plan, which they tabled earlier in this round of bargaining.

The CBA and HEABC agreed to take a three-week break to review proposals and conduct additional research on the outstanding issues. Talks will resume on May 28, and are scheduled to run for three weeks.

The primary non-monetary issues remaining are scheduling, grievance and arbitration procedures, health and safety, anti-bullying, and allowances. Benefits and compensation negotiations will begin after non-monetary items are settled.

The Community Bargaining Association represents over 14,000 members, including 1,500 HEU members. The majority of CBA members are represented by the BCGEU. Other unions at the table are UFCW, CUPE, HSA and USWA.

May 13 is LPN Day

 

8 May ’12

Licensed Practical Nurses play a fundamental role in the delivery of quality health care in B.C.

The BCGEU salutes the work LPNs do. They’re ever more critical to the health care system as they take on new roles and responsibilities within the scope of their professional practice. Every day, they ensure the people of our province are taken care of when they need it most.

BCGEU is proud to represent LPNs in every part of B.C. In community health, in various facilities and at independent health worksites, BCGEU LPNs work hard to maintain a health care system that we all can be proud of.

“The work of LPNs can be difficult as health budgets shrink. They are professionals through and through. We’re proud to represent LPNs as part of our diverse membership," said Darryl Walker, BCGEU president.

LPN Day 2012 poster
(high resolution)

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LPN Day 2012 poster
(low resolution)

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 AMBULANCE  PARAMEDICS  APPLAUD  GOVERNMENT  FOR  PROTECTING  FIRST  RESPONDERS

May  1,  2012   

VANCOUVER,  BC  –  The  Ambulance  Paramedics  of  British  Columbia  (APBC)  applaud  the  Government  of  British  Columbia  for  tabling  the  Emergency  Intervention  Disclosure  Act  in  the  legislature  yesterday.

 “We  applaud  the  Government  of  B.C.  for  taking  this  step  to  protect  the  health  and  peace  of  mind  of  our  members,  the  ambulance  paramedics,  as  well  as  our  colleagues  in  the  police  and  fire  departments  across  B.C.,”  said  Bronwyn  Barter,  APBC’s  President.  “Our  members  are  proud  to  often  be  the  first  on  scene  to  act  quickly  to  make  sure  British  Columbians’  health  needs  are  met.  This  legislation  demonstrates  government  putting  workers’  safety  first.”

 The  Emergency  Intervention  Disclosure  Act  will:

 • Enable  emergency  workers  and  Good  Samaritans  to  get  a  court  order  to  require  individuals  to  give  a  bodily  fluid  sample,  if  one  is  not  given  voluntarily.  

• Protect  privacy  by  assuring  information  is  shared  in  confidence  only.  

• Set  penalties  for  non-‐compliance  of  testing  orders  and  privacy  provisions.  

• Establish  a  presumption  of  disease  exposure  for  first  responders  seeking  workers’  compensation  benefits.  

It  has  been  a  joint  initiative  of  all  public  safety  workers  –  ambulance  paramedics,  police  and  fire  departments.    “We  want  to  specifically  recognize  MLA  Norm  Letnick  (Kelowna-‐Lake  Country)  for  his  leadership  on  this  important  issue,”  said  Barter.  

“Our  paramedics  and  partners  in  police  and  fire  are  routinely  exposed  to  needle-‐stick  injuries  or  blood  splashes.  Not  being  able  to  find  out  in  a  timely  manner  whether  or  not  you’ve  been  exposed  to  a  blood-‐borne  illness  can  cause  a  great  deal  of  stress.  We  have  the  right  to  know.”