Jan 26 2009

A One-Sided “Deadlock”

Category: Point of Information,Strike Discussion (2008-09)jonnyj @ 4:35 pm

January 7th to January 24th Negotiations Timeline

Wednesday, January 7

The employer gives CUPE 3903 a pass that they call a “comprehensive offer” and asks the CUPE 3903 bargaining team to bring it to the membership for a vote. This “comprehensive offer” fails to respond to the reductions in demands CUPE 3903 made that day, indicating it was likely prepared ahead of time as opposed to as a part of the negotiation process.

Thursday, January 8

At a General Membership Meeting, 85% of the members present vote to deem the Employer’s offer inadequate and send the bargaining team back to the bargaining table.


Friday, January 9

When the employer shows up at the bargaining table, they announce they will be asking the Ministry of Labour to run a forced ratification vote on the January 7th offer. No Movement from Employer

Friday. January 9- Tuesday, January 20

No bargaining because of call for forced ratification. Employer Unwilling to Bargain

Monday, January 19 and Tuesday, January 20

CUPE 3903 membership rejects (once again) the employer’s Jan 7. offer by a 63% vote.

Tuesday, January 20
The employer announces to the media that they will not be negotiating any further.

No Movement from Employer

Wednesday, January 21

Morning Dalton McGuinty announces he is appointing his lead mediator—Reg Pearson—to bring both parties back to the bargaining table.

1:00pm CUPE 3903 bargaining team returns to the bargaining table. Employer’s bargaining team does not show up. CUPE 3903 Ready to Bargain

Thursday, January 22

CUPE 3903 bargaining team gives the employer a memorandum of settlement offer that cuts demands from a 10.8% increase to a 9.4% increase over 2 years. Movement from CUPE 3903


Friday, January 23

1:30am The mediator (after having kept CUPE 3903 waiting at the table for a response) announces that the employer will not have a response until the morning.

10am The employer’s bargaining team sends back its next pass which is identical to the offer from January 7 except that it has a new cover page and changes one word. No Movement from Employer

3pm CUPE 3903 bargaining team communicates to the mediator its willingness to further narrow demands to a few key priority areas, representing a cut of more than fifty proposals and a decrease from a 9.4% increase to an 8.3% increase over 2 years. Movement from CUPE 3903

5pm: The mediator returns with the Employer’s response: they are unwilling to move on any issues. No Movement from Employer

Saturday, January 24

Midnight: The mediator tells CUPE 3903 bargaining team that he will be calling McGuinty at 7am and that he expects to hear from them by 2am whether they will agree to binding arbitration rather than face back to work legislation.

2:30am: CUPE 3903’s executive and bargaining team vote to reject binding arbitration. CUPE 3903’s bargaining team requests, via the mediator, to continue negotiations with the Employer on Saturday. CUPE 3903 Ready to Bargain

3:30am: Mediator informs CUPE 3903 bargaining team that the Employer is only willing to continue negotiations if CUPE 3903 will agree to the Jan. 7 offer made by the Employer. Employer Unwilling to Bargain

Noon: Dalton McGuinty announces that he is calling the legislature back for a 1:00pm Sunday meeting to legislate CUPE 3903 back to work because of deadlocked negotiations. He ignores the fact that the “deadlock” is one-sided and that the employer is being significantly rewarded for refusing to bargain for seventeen days.

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Jan 24 2009

Can the Government Pass Back to Work Legislation to End the York Strike?

Category: Point of Information,Strike Discussion (2008-09)jonnyj @ 3:16 pm

The following article has been reposted from Doorey’s Workplace Law Blog

So, the University, in its’ wisdom, has now elected to resume classes for about 5000 students, but to leave the other 45,000 students at home. I really can’t fathom why this was thought to be a good idea, since it is sure to really piss off the 45,000 excluded students, to create a sort of 2 tier system in which some students complete their courses, while others don’t, and no doubt to stir up difficulties on the picket line, as thousands of students now will need to cross the lines this Monday (barring a surprising settlement over the weekend). The other little nugget is that no student is actually required to come to class, and they can’t be punished for not doing so. Classes will be recorded, so presumably, students who opt to avoid the hassle and stay home can simply listen to the recording from the comforts of their living rooms. I would. And I have no idea how this will benefit students who will see only some of their classes resume. They will now have two different time lines for completing their courses, won’t they? For example, in my courses, which are now scheduled to resume, I have students from Arts, where classes are not starting up. So will these students actually be in two terms at once, finished some of their fall classes, but not all, and beginning some of their winter course, but not all? This all hurts my brain, but its not my administrative problem, so I will let others worry about it.

But I’d rather not write about the nightmare the university has just created by this decision to resume some classes, but not most. I was intrigued by the provincial governments’ position yesterday that it would not legislate an end to the strike because they think it will violate the Charter. Say What?! What in the heck are they talking about? Governments can’t pass back to work legislation? Since when?

This is a point I have raised several times before, especially during the whole debate about whether the TTC should be ordered back to work. Here’s the legal issue in a nutshell. Section 2(d) of the Charter guarantees “freedom of association”. But in 1987, the Supreme Court decided that freedom of association does not include a right to strike or a right to collective bargaining. Therefore, governments are free to order strikers back to work, since the workers don’t have a guaranteed right to strike.

Then came Health Services in 2007. That case did not deal directly with the right to strike. However, the Court did rule there that it is was wrong when it ruled that Section 2(d) did not include a right to collective bargaining. In fact, it does. But the Court was clear in noting that it was not dealing with the right to strike. So why does the government believe that back to work legislation at York would be challenged, and maybe successfully, by CUPE?

The answer lies in two things. One is a general trend in the Supreme Court towards expanding the scope of Section 2(d) protections which has been creeping into decisions for a while, but most notably in Health Services and Dunmore, the case involving the exclusion of agricultural workers from protective labour legislation. The second factor is the statement made in Health Services that Section 2(d) should be interpreted to provide “at least the level of protection” provided by international labour conventions that Canada has ratified. Canada has ratified Convention 87 of the International Labour Organization, and while C87 does not expressly include a right to strike, that right has long been read into the Convention by the ILO’s expert bodies. That is important, because the Supreme Court directed us in Health Services to the decisions of those expert bodies to find out what C87 means.

Well, if Section 2(d) of the Canadian Charter provides at least as much protection of freedom of association as does C87, as interpreted by the ILO’s expert bodies, and those bodies have found C87 includes an extensive right to strike, then, logic would follow, Section 2(d) protects a right to strike. (This is an argument I have explored in more detail in this paper, if you are interested) Unions are waiting in the wings for the right case to come along to make this argument. McGuinty’s people have warned him that this could be the case. Why?

The reason lies in understanding precisely what the ILO says about C87. Here’s a good article describing its approach. In short, it allows back to work legislation, or other legislative restrictions on the right to strike, only in cases where a strike “would endanger the life, personal safety or health of the whole or part of the population” (ILO, 1983b, para. 214). Does this include university classes? I highly doubt it. This is why the ILO expert bodies have ruled Canadian back to work legislation violates C87 many, many times, as this report describes, including legislation ordering teachers back to work. In fact, Canada has been specifically singled out by the ILO for its persistent failure to protect the right to strike in the way that our governments like to rush to back to work legislation whenever the public gets pissed off by a strike.

So there is little doubt that, if McGuinty ordered a legislated end to the York strike, the government would face a new complaint before the ILO, which it would no doubt lose. This hasn’t frightened governments in the past, because the ILO’s only power is public embarrassment, and our governments have not cared about that. But now the stakes are raised, because in addition to the ILO complaint, the McGuinty government could also find itself facing a Charter challenge. Were the government to lose that argument, and the Court find that Section 2(d) protects a right to strike, governments across Canada could then find themselves unable to use back to work legislation in other cases–garbage strikes, transit strikes, etc.

Of course, it is possible that the Court could recognize a constitutional right to strike, but still permit back to work legislation. This could happen if the Court ruled: (1) there is a right to strike under Section 2(d); (2) back to work legislation violates that right; but (3) limiting that right is justified in the circumstances under Section 1 of the Charter, which allows violations of Charter rights when it is justified “in a free and democratic society”. But I can understand why a government might be concerned about getting into that sort of debate in regards to a university education strike. If I were the government, I’d prefer to fight that sort of battle in a case involving something like, say, public transit or health care, where the implications of a strike are huge to the public well-being and/or the economy. Compared to a hospital strike or even a TTC strike, a strike by a few thousand university instructors in North Toronto doesn’t seem all that significant in the big picture.

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Jan 21 2009

Back to Work Legislation?

Category: Point of InformationBob Hanke @ 9:41 am

There have been a lot of rumblings that York will use its BoG/Liberal connections to push for back to work legislation. I have no idea how likely this would be to succeed, given that McGuinty opposed it previously, but it might be worthwhile to send some emails to our MPPs and to McGuinty and Smitherman.

You can find all the pertinent email addresses here:

http://www.ontla.on.ca/web/members/members_current.do?locale=en

Leslie

____________________________________________________________

Top Front Page Story:

Why McGuinty lets York University Strike Drag On
Province is worried Supreme Court ruling bars back-to-work bill
by STEVE RUSSELL (excerpted from the Toronto Star, A1-8, January 22, 2009)

Premier Dalton McGuinty is resisting pressure to recall the Legislature to end the 11-week-old York University strike because the government believes such a move would be challenged in court.
To read the complete story, click here.
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Jan 13 2009

YUFA Affirms Support of Collective Bargaining

Category: Newsjonnyj @ 6:53 pm

The following motions were passed unanimously at the YUFA Executive meeting of 12 January 2009:

  1. YUFA Executive re-affirms its support of free collective bargaining and does not endorse a ratification vote of CUPE 3903 members as forced by the Employer.
  2. YUFA Executive strongly urges all YUFA members to respect individual CUPE 3903 members’ rights in the forced ratification vote to vote freely and according to their conscience. We urge all YUFA members to respect CUPE members’ rights to vote freely.
  3. YUFA Executive, recognizing the power relations implicit in theroles of YUFA members and CUPE 3903 members, does not endorse any YUFA member attempting to influence how a CUPE 3903 member might vote in the forced ratification vote.

January 17, 2009 update: York faculty association vows to support strikers

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Jan 13 2009

Bargaining 101 for CUPE 3903 Members

Category: Eventsjonnyj @ 6:45 pm

If you answer yes to any of these questions:

  • Are you finding it difficult to stay current with the strike news?
  • Unsure what the employer has offered us?
  • Need more info to make an informed decision about the Forced Ratification Vote?
  • Finding it difficult to ask your questions in a large group?

Meet with a representative from our Executive and Bargaining Teams in a small, informal, and accepting environment to ask your questions.

Saturday, January 17
246 Bloor St West at Bedford (St. George Subway)
room 548
3-5 pm

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