Bringing the Union Advantage to Those Who Need it Most

 

Thursday, May 8, 2014   http://www.cope378.ca

Wednesday at the Canadian Labour Congress Convention centred around bringing the benefits of unions to people who don’t currently have access: unorganized workers, particularly young workers, racialized workers, migrant workers, women, and people with disabilities.

On a morning panel, “The Labour Movement is About a Better Life for Everyone”, activists from other organizations talked about labour’s ability to make positive change for everyone.

Acting General Secretary of the Bangladesh Free Trade Union Congress Repon Chowdhury talked about the positive impact of the union-driven Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh.

“We must work together and the Accord is one of the best things around the world that we have, from trade unions working together,” Chowdhury said. But he also noted there are companies that have not signed on, and he urged Canadians to pressure companies who have not yet signed the accord.

Vice-President of the Canadian Association of Retired Persons (CARP) Susan Eng said they rarely use their organization’s full name anymore, “because so few of our members can afford to retire.”

She thanked the labour movement for leading the drive to expand the Canada Pension Plan, even though many union members have workplace pensions: “The key is that we put our shoulder to the wheel, even when it doesn’t benefit our organizations.”

She advised unions to join with allies and to focus their efforts on one thing at a time: “The need is to mobilize, to concentrate, to get that specific thing done first, even if you have ten other things you must do, you must do this one thing first.”

Finally, Anthony Pizzino from the Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario Workers said a key role unions can play is helping raise awareness of issues that affect all working people.

“In Canada…five workers a day don’t come home,” he said, adding that Canadians most aware of the shocking numbers of workplace injuries and deaths.

Another afternoon panel, “Bringing the Union Advantage to Those Who Need it Most”, had labour academics and activists talk about helping unorganized workers to join unions.

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Brock University Labour Studies Professor Dr. Kendra Coulter (right) began by talking about how unions can reach out to people to show how important they are to a fair society.

Coulter said we need to look to countries like Sweden that have high union density, which came about because “workers in the past collaborated, not just in solidarity at work but also a sense of social solidarity, which is that we all do better when things are fair at work.”

“We need to reclaim [job creation] as a workers’ agenda and creating good jobs,” Coulter said, “If we don’t raise this low wage floor, if we don’t tackle this scourge of precarious work, in 20 years we

Acting Director of the AFL-CIO Department of Investment, Brandon Rees, said unions have to work globally, because the growing inequality we see in Canada is growing in the rest of the world too.

“The challenge is that capital is global and corporations are increasingly global…that means that we too must be organizing on a global scale to address these economic challenges that globalization presents,” said Rees.

Next, AFL-CIO Organizer Chloe Osmer talked specifically about how we need to change strategies to organize in the service-based economy, with the proliferation of precarious work.

“The lack of regulation, the shift to a service sector has made it more challenging to organize but it has also given us a lot of opportunities,” Osmer said.

Osmer talked about her experience organizing car wash workers in Los Angeles, and how it was important to mobilize younger organizers and students.

“We have to use every tool that we can to turn people’s public perceptions of unions around, because most people you’ll run into in the workplace haven’t had the experience of being in a union. They don’t know what the reality of the situation is. The more that young people are reflected in our unions and the way we operate and our organizers the more young people will see it’s about them.”

During the day delegates to convention debated several resolutions. In the morning, delegates passed a resolution on mental health, one opposing the end of Canada Post home mail delivery, and another committing the Canadian Labour Congress to developing an educational module on violence against women and other steps on this issue, including supporting a federal inquiry into missing and murdered Aboriginal women and the creation of a national action plan on violence against women.

In the afternoon the convention passed the final convention policy paper “Organizing for a Fairer Tomorrow” and passed more resolutions, including one on labour rights and another directing the CLC to develop a national young workers’ strategy, including opportunities for young workers in the workforce and the labour movement.

Near the end of the day COPE 378 Human Rights Committee Chair and Executive Board Member Joyce Galuska spoke on a resolution on human rights. She wanted to particularly highlight the issue of missing and murdered indigenous women.

“I’m kind of sad to be standing here three years after the last conference knowing my CLC hasn’t been bold enough to fight this issue,” Galuska said. She thanked COPE 378 for their campaign, which allows members to send messages to Harper in support of justice for these women.

“I want to inundate the Harper government with a mountain of shame letters because I wanted the CLC to encourage every one of their affiliates to write to Stephen Harper, either by creating their own campaign or joining the Amnesty International Stolen Sisters campaign.”

CLC criticizes freeze on EI premiums – Georgetti says it’s being done on backs of the unemployed

OTTAWA ― The President of the Canadian Labour Congress says that the federal government’s three-year freeze on Employment Insurance (EI) premiums is being done on the backs of unemployed Canadians.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty claims that freezing EI premiums will help businesses in Canada to create more jobs. “This is a shell game,” says Ken Georgetti. “This government has given away billions in tax breaks to corporations and the promise is always that they will use that windfall to invest in creating jobs. But they are sitting on the cash or paying it out in big bonuses to their CEOs. That money would be far more productive in the hands of unemployed workers who would spend it in the economy.”

Georgetti also criticizes Flaherty’s claim that he can freeze premiums because fewer people are receiving EI. “The number of unemployed workers has changed very little over the past year and a half. But fewer of those people are able to receive EI because the minister and his government have made it increasingly difficult for the unemployed to receive benefits.”

The most recent numbers show that the proportion of unemployed workers receiving EI has shrunk to an all-time low of 37.8%. “This government has cynically changed the rules in a way that leaves far too many unemployed Canadians out in the cold,” says Georgetti.

He challenges Flaherty’s claim that job creation has been a success. “Our job creation has slowed down in 2013 and it has barely put a dent into the number of unemployed workers. And I remind the minister that we cannot build a successful economy on precarious and part-time jobs.”

The Canadian Labour Congress, the national voice of the labour movement, represents 3.3 million Canadian workers. The CLC brings together Canada’s national and international unions along with the provincial and territorial federations of labour and 130 district labour councils.

Web site: www.canadianlabour.ca
Follow us on Twitter @CanadianLabour

Contact: Dennis Gruending, CLC Communications: Tel. 613-526-7431.
Cell-text: 613-878-6040. Email: dgruending@clc-ctc.ca

CLC endorses consumer boycott of Labatt imports: St. John’s brewery workers on strike since April

August 15, 2013     http://www.canadianlabour.ca

Labatt brewery strike escalates with a CLC boycott

OTTAWA ― The Canadian Labour Congress has endorsed a national consumer boycott against a number of imported brands of Labatt beer and is calling on the company to return to the bargaining table.

“This is a David and Goliath struggle between about 50 local workers and the world’s largest multi-national brewing corporation trying to force its employees into a race to the bottom,” says CLC President Ken Georgetti. “Canadian workers and their unions are not going to stand idly by and allow this to happen.”

The workers in St. John’s have been on strike since April 10. They are members of the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Public Employees (NAPE/NUPGE). Their employer is the Canadian division of the Anheuser-Busch InBev brewing corporation, which has after-tax profits of more than $9 billion.

“This multi-national company is trying in St. John’s to impose concessions and roll-backs on its employees which would establish a precedent for its other unionized workers across the globe,” says Georgetti. “We can’t allow them to get away with that.” 

The national consumer boycott was requested by the National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE), the national union to which the striking workers belong. The Labatt imports being targeted for boycott include Stella Artois, Becks, and Lowenbrau. The focus is on imported products in order to prevent other unionized Labatt employees in Canada from experiencing a loss of work.

In Newfoundland and Labrador people are also being urged to boycott a number of other Labatt beers, including Budweiser, Labatt Blue, Alexander Keith’s and Kokanee.

The Canadian Labour Congress, the national voice of the labour movement, represents 3.3 million Canadian workers. The CLC brings together Canada’s national and international unions along with the provincial and territorial federations of labour and 130 district labour councils.

Web site: www.canadianlabour.ca
Follow us on Twitter @CanadianLabour

Contact: Dennis Gruending, CLC Communications: Tel. 613-526-7431.
Cell-text: 613-878-6040. Email: dgruending@clc-ctc.ca

The time for pension leadership is now: Georgetti calls on Premiers to move forward with an expanded Canada Pension Plan

Wednesday, 24 July 2013  http://www.canadianlabour.ca

 

OTTAWA ― The Canadian Labour Congress is pleased Ontario has pledged to continue to press for an expanded Canada Pension Plan at this week’s Council of the Federation meetings. 

Ken Georgetti, the President of the Canadian Labour Congress says he was pleased to learn that Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynn is keeping CPP expansion on the agenda for the premiers to discuss.  The leadership of provincial governments have been a key factor building majority support in favour of increasing the amount that Canadians save through the CPP to avoid a future retirement income crisis.

“While the federal government drags its feet, it falls on the provinces to lead the way to ensure that Canadians have enough  for a decent retirement after a lifetime of work.  The future cost of caring for those who don’t have a workplace pension to help them save for retirement – housing, health care, community and social services – will be our children’s to bear, if government fails to act now,” says Georgetti.

According to Georgetti, it’s time for the Premiers to make it crystal clear to the federal government that the formula required to expand the CPP already exists and it’s time to get on with the work to make it a reality.

“The time for excuses is over. We’ve got 40 years of experience with voluntary pooled pension schemes, whether you call them RRSPs or PRPPs.  The bottom line is they don’t get the job done.  They are an inadequate and expensive savings vehicle for the vast majority of Canadians, and the federal government knows it. They just need to stop listening to financial industry lobbyists and the selective arguments of some selfish business interests.” he said.

A recent Harvard University study echoed the Canadian government’s own findings earlier this year that showed improving taxpayer subsidies (deductions for PRPP or RRSP contributions and Tax Free Savings Accounts) only benefit people who are already actively saving for retirement, whereas automatic contributions (like CPP premiums) greatly increase the savings of passive savers – the large majority of people who need a retirement plan like the CPP.

Georgetti says “The choice for today’s political leaders is stark – you can help business save a little more today by dragging your feet on retirement income security or you can take steps to prevent a retirement income crisis that will result in a generation of impoverished seniors whose care will come at a very high social and economic cost to the Canadian public and business alike.”

The Canadian Labour Congress, the national voice of the labour movement, represents 3.3 million Canadian workers. The CLC brings together Canada’s national and international unions along with the provincial and territorial federations of labour and 130 district labour councils. Web site: www.canadianlabour.ca Follow us on Twitter @CanadianLabour

Who is on the Harper Government Enemies List?

 

Friday, 19 July 2013    http://www.canadianlabour.ca

 

Canadian Labour Congress launches an online contest while it waits for the Harper Government to answer Access to Information Requests about “friend” and “enemy” stakeholder lists

 

OTTAWA ― The Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) is quite sure its name is among the organizations and individuals on the Harper government’s list of “enemies” provided to new Cabinet Ministers earlier this week. But to confirm it, the CLC has filed formal access to information requests to key government departments, asking them to produce the lists of stakeholders deemed friends and foes by ministerial staff at the request of the Prime Minister’s Office.

Knowing that the government will try to avoid transparency and that it could take months and probably numerous appeals before the information is released, the CLC plans to bide the time with a Facebook contest in which Canadians can guess who’s on the Harper Government Top 10 Enemies List.

“It comes as no surprise to us that this government builds files and keeps lists of people they regard as threats to their own agenda,” said CLC President Ken Georgetti. “What is surprising is the PMO going so far as to refer to groups that have different opinions or have different ideas about how to make life better for Canadians as ‘enemies’ and instruct Ministers of the Crown to shut them out,” he said. “It smacks of the darkest days of McCarthyism and is a un-Canadian view of the world.”

Georgetti says there is no doubt in his mind the CLC is among the government’s list of enemies: “Our efforts to expand the Canada Pension Plan and help people save more for retirement, to expose the reckless expansion of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program and the abuse of migrant workers, and to reverse radical cuts to Employment Insurance have us in the PMO’s crosshairs.”

The CLC’s contest can be found at www.facebook.com/Harpers-Most-Unwanted and will run until all of its access to information requests have been fully answered.

The Canadian Labour Congress, the national voice of the labour movement, represents 3.3 million Canadian workers. The CLC brings together Canada’s national and international unions along with the provincial and territorial federations of labour and 130 district labour councils. Web site: www.canadianlabour.ca Follow us on Twitter @CanadianLabour