Top seven reasons unions matter to young people

By Tria Donaldson   August 22, 2013   http://rabble.ca

Tria Donaldson is a youth activist with roots in the environmental movement, the labour movement, and Indigenous Rights. Tria is a senior Communications Officer at CUPE National, and on the board of rabble.ca.

Top seven reasons unions matter to young people

Young workers today face many challenges in the workplace.

Entering the workplace is the first challenge. The youth employment rate is almost double the national average, at 13.6 per cent. You hear stories all the time of new graduates who are unable to find work in their field. Unpaid internships and short term coop placements are the norm for many workers.

Job insecurity is rampant. Many young workers have to work two or three jobs to make ends meet. Part time and contract work is common.

Soaring housing prices, lack of affordable child care and crippling levels of student debt for graduates mean putting off starting a family for many, and struggling to make ends meet for others.

These were just some of the issues identified by young workers at the Canadian Union of Public Employees’ (CUPE) first ever young workers strategy session. The three day meeting brought together over 60 young people from all across Canada to have their voices heard and discuss getting young people involved in the labour movement.

There is a perception amongst union activists that young people today are apathetic and don’t care about unions, but the conversations over the three days show that young people get it and are ready to get involved.

The words below are taken directly from the young people from across Canada who participated in CUPE’s recent strategy session. They remind me of the vital work that trade unions do on behalf of all society.

1. Unions allow workers to become united and to mobilize and come together during times of collective agreements and negotiations. Unionization is important to raise the standard of living for its workers and for society and social programs.

2. Unions make life better for people everywhere. Even if you are not in a union, you enjoy things that have become the norm are there because unions have fought for that. Unions are there to raise everyone up — it should be a race to a top not a race to the bottom.

3. Unions help put fairness in the workplace. People know when they are not being treated fairly, and equate unions with fairness.

4. In a unionized workplace you have a voice and an advocate. Whether you are a worker with disability or from another group, you have voice.

5. A union is there to be strong and united and to be there for workers in their struggles.

6. We live in a global world. It is important that unions can do international solidarity work and stand up against human rights violations.

7. Unions are instrumental in fighting for workers right to safety in the workplace. It is new and young workers that are often hurt on the job, and unions push for their rights.

In a world where the role of unions is constantly questioned and attacked, these young workers spoke to the heart of the matter of why unions matter.

This meeting was part of CUPE’s ongoing work to engage young workers and honour the Year of the New and Young worker. For more information visit CUPE’s young worker webpage here.  

CETA talks ‘re-launch’ in September: Council of Canadians to deliver petitions in Brussels

By Stuart Trew   August 22, 2013   http://rabble.ca

Council-of-Canadians's picture      Council of Canadians’ blog

CETA talks 're-launch' in September: Council of Canadians to deliver petitions in Brussels

Between September 17 and 19, the Council of Canadians will hand-deliver a CETA petition, signed by thousands of people in Canada, to Members of the European Parliament in Brussels. The petition focuses on the excessive (FIPA- or NAFTA-like) investor protections built into the proposed Canada-EU deal but it is more broadly designed to protest a deal that few people have heard of, even after four years of negotiations, and that a growing number oppose.

The timing of the petition delivery is especially important after news that the Harper government will “re-launch” the Canada-EU trade talks in early September, with the aim of wrapping up the negotiations before parallel EU-U.S. talks begin in October.

We need your help gathering signatures for the petition so it can have maximum effect in Europe and right here in Canada. There are two easy ways that you can help:

1. Circulate the petition to your friends and, if you’re a member of a union or other organization, to your colleagues as well. If you have a website, consider copying our web action image (top left) and use it on your site to link back to our petition page.

2. If you are holding or attending public events in the next two weeks, you could print off the letter and have people sign it right away. Hard-copy letters can be mailed to our offices at 170 Laurier Avenue West, Ste. 700, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 5V5.

Council of Canadians Executive Director Garry Neil will travel to Brussels on September 17 to meet with Members of the European Parliament and trade justice allies, and will deliver the petitions at this point. So we would need to have all hard-copy petitions/letters at our head office by Monday, September 16. We will continue to accept online signatures to the petition up to September 17.

Thank you for your help and good luck!

For more information about the Canada-EU deal, visit Canadians.org/CETA

The Council of Canadians is Canada’s largest citizens’ organization, with members and chapters across the country. We work to protect Canadian independence by promoting progressive policies on fair trade, clean water, energy security, public health care, and other issues of social and economic concern to Canadians.

Protesters prevent meeting

Striking CUPE Bonfield municipal employees, angry residents, prevent Bonfield council from holding special meeting

By GORD YOUNG, The Nugget

Friday, August 16, 2013

 

Striking municipal employees and angry residents prevented Bonfield council from holding a special meeting Thursday where they were expected to give themselves the authority to hire replacement workers.

Council members arriving at the parish hall for the 4 p.m. meeting were greeted by members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and residents, objecting to the both the timing and notification of the gathering.

The protesting forced the meeting to be cancelled, leaving Mayor Randy McLaren outside parish hall where he spoke to workers and responded to questions and concerns from residents upset about the labour dispute.

CUPE, which represents the 16 striking municipal workers, warned leading up to the meeting that council was making plans to “hire scabs and prolong the strike,” accusing McLaren of being underhanded by calling a 4 p.m. special meeting on short notice in order to avoid public scrutiny.

“Now he’s avoiding the public by scheduling meetings at inconvenient times for the public to avoid hearing from the residents about the strike. The only way this strike will end is at the bargaining table. Avoiding the public, cancelling meetings and hiring scabs will only prolong the strike and aggravate the already heated situation,” said CUPE national representative Steve Boyle, in a release.

Boyle later said the move by council to give itself authority to hire replacement workers is a huge step backwards and that it reeks of an attempt to break the union.

But McLaren said there’s no immediate intention to hire outside workers and that move would simply give municipal politicians the legal authority do so.

Such powers, he said, may be needed in the case of an emergency or extreme weather.

“We’re not trying to escalate tensions,” said McLaren, acknowledging the meeting agenda likely wasn’t going to be well received by striking workers and their supporters.

Also on Thursday’s agenda were several other strike-related items, including amending signing authorities and authorizing council to write cheques in order to do business.

In addition, a resolution to expand the authority of designated members of council was also to be discussed, something McLaren said essentially formalizes the hands-on role he and other township politicians have assumed during the strike, such as operating the landfill.

He said the Ministry of Municipal Affairs advised the municipality to take the steps early on as part of its strike plan. And McLaren noted the labour dispute has gone on now for two weeks.

The municipaliy’s16 workers have been off the job since Aug. 1, affecting services such as road maintenance, tax payments, building permits, inspections, planning services and general inquiries.

CUPE says key issues are the threat of contracting out and a list of concessions demanded from the municipality including attacks on seniority, training, employment security, scheduling, vacations, sick leave and benefits.

McLaren has said there are some 40 outstanding issues and the municipality is seeking changes to the existing collective agreement, including reducing the number of bankable sick days to which employees are entitled, increasing the length of service required for additional vacation entitlement and extending the probationary period for new hires. He has also acknowledged the municipality has proposed language that would allow it to contract hire.

But McLaren has said there is no intention of contracting out core services.

gord.young@sunmedia

Solidarity served at BBQ rally hosted by CUPE leaders

Aug 14, 2013    http://cupe.ca

The Bonfield Township Council meeting was cancelled by the mayor and the forecasted rain never came, but CUPE leaders led by Charles Fleury, CUPE national secretary-treasurer, Candace Rennick, CUPE Ontario secretary-treasurer and Henri Giroux, president of North Bay CUPE District Council along with CUPE members and Bonfield residents, did come out on Tuesday afternoon to show support for the striking CUPE 4616-2 members at a solidarity BBQ.

“You have the support of over 600,000 CUPE members across Canada,” said Charles Fleury, CUPE National Secretary-Treasurer, bringing greetings and support for the 16 municipal workers on strike in Bonfield. “CUPE supports your fight against concessions and we are with you every step of the way.”

Echoing brother Fleury’s remarks, Candace Rennick, CUPE Ontario secretary treasurer said: “We will stand by you and provide you with all the resources you need to win this fight.” Henri Giroux, who helped organize the event, also thanked the community for their continued support for the striking workers.

More than 150 people, from Bonfield residents to CUPE members from across the province, to local union members, brought solidarity messages and let the strikers know that they have the full support of their Ontario brothers and sisters.

Garth Pigeau, President of CUPE 4616-2 was encouraged by the support shown to his striking members and said, “Solidarity, this is what the union is all about.”

The workers have been on strike since August 1, 2013.

Decert Campaign at Trail FAIR Society Successful

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff, WKLC Member-At-Large: Trail

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Patsy Harmston, President BCGEU Local 309

TRAIL-It was with “a heavy heart” that Patsy Harmston, President of BCGEU Local 309, announced the result of a decertification vote of Trail FAIR and the Trail Transition House on July 31, 2013, bringing an end to those areas as BCGEU Local 309 worksites.

The vote was 21 to 18 in favour of the decertification, and showed, according to Harmston, “a divided and toxic workplace”. Voting began on June 18 and ended on July 11.

Harmston thanked the West Kootenay Labour Council, United Steelworkers Locals 480 and 9705 for “great support in holding a leafleting and barbequing  in Trail” in support of the pro union supporters.

United Steelworkers Locals 480 and 9705, along with CUPE, BCGEU Locals, the West Kootenay Labour Council and the public came out to support the members of BCGEU Local 309 in Trail with a barbeque on July 2 with speakers urging them to deal with their issues fairly, professionally and stay unionized.

To those that supported them during the decertification process, “I want to pass on to all of you a great thank you for your support. It felt really good to have you stand with us and we just can’t thank you enough.”, Harmston said on behalf of the pro union supporters at Trail FAIR and Trail Transition House.