NAC tentative agreement ratified

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Earlier this week, our members at the National Arts Centre voted in favour of the tentative agreement put before them.

As we had reported earlier, our members had voted to strike after talks at the bargaining table had broken down over wage increases and job security.

The bargaining team unanimously recommended acceptance of the tentative agreement.

The deal includes wage increases of 1.75% for 2012, 1.5% for 2013, and 2% for 2014. The bargaining team was able to secure improvements on the job security front and better protections for employees facing layoffs.

Once it goes into effect, the collective agreement will expire on December 31, 2014.

Honouring our heros

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Last Sunday, hundreds gathered on Parliament Hill to pay their respect to the men and women of law enforcement who lost their lives during the course of duty.

This year’s ceremony was an occasion to remember the three Mounties who were killed during the June 4 mass shooting in Moncton. The names of a Toronto police constable and a Saskatchewan conservation officer who died in the line of duty were also added to the honour roll this year.

But the memorial also serves as an opportunity to say thanks to the countless police and peace officers who regularly put their lives at risk in the name of public safety.

In our national parks, that responsibility falls on park wardens. During the course of their day, these men and women face dangers ranging from unruly campers to hungry grizzly bears. The most recent fatality involving a park warden happened in 2002, when Michael Wynn’s life was cut short due to an avalanche.

Wynn, aged 37, had worked for Parks Canada for 13 years.

“Our national parks are breathtaking places,” said Eddie Kennedy, national advisor for Parks Canada. “But they come with their share of hazards. Our visitors owe a great debt to the wardens who keep our parks safe.”

Kennedy was in Ottawa last Sunday to represent our union during the ceremony.

Each year, the Union of National Employees and the Parks Canada Enforcement Branch collaborate to send ten park wardens to represent their comrades during the memorial. This year, the participants were Ben Alderman, Lisa Babineau, Courtney Bearinger, Jonathan Jansen, Eric Jensen, Daniel Keenan-Pelletier, Patrick Latreille, Julia Montgomery and Tyler Tilson.

The Union of National Employees wishes to recognize all our brave park wardens for their important public service.

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Science and Tech Museum Closes

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Update: The museum has announced that it will not be ready to reopen until January 2015. 

We received news late last week that the Canadian Science and Technology Museum would be closed for an indefinite period because of airborne mould.

“Our first concern was finding out what would happen to our members – ensuring that the employer would respect the collective agreement,” explained National Executive Vice-President Kevin King.

“But so far, we’ve been pleasantly surprised. This employer has been doing a great job at ensuring that our members are being accommodated during this closure. It’s also committed to meeting with the Local every two weeks to keep them in the loop.”

The majority of these members have been relocated to other offices, where they can continue performing work for the museum. Museum guides, who can’t perform their work while the museum is closed, are being kept home with pay.

During a meeting with the Local on Monday, the employer stressed that it does not plan on laying-off anyone during this time.

This latest health and safety hazard has put the spotlight on the museum’s suffering infrastructure. There’s $3.5M worth of maintenance work to be done, including repairing a leaky roof and installing proper heating and ventilation units. There’s also the issue of asbestos that was found in the roof back in October 2013.

The employer told the Local on Monday that they are looking into replacing the roof, which would address both the mould and asbestos.

But that hasn’t stopped politicians from dreaming big. This gem of the national capital region has been housed in an old industrial bakery since 1967 – it was supposed to be a temporary location.

“There’s a real need to have a more modern Science and Tech Museum in the high tech capital of Canada,” Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson told CFRA. “I’ve always thought that that museum should be down in the downtown core.”

But both the museum and the conservative government say this isn’t bound to happen anytime soon; there’s no money for that kind of project right now, according to John Baird.

In a brilliant op-ed earlier this week, Emma Godmere perfectly captured how magical this museum is for anyone who graced its halls as a kid.

“To anyone else, I was just another suburban Ottawa kid ambling around a museum on a quiet, admission-free evening. But what no one else could see was that I — along with hundreds, even thousands of unsuspecting students before and after me — was discovering a whole new dimension, one that computer screens and elementary school science classes could never quite reach.”

Godmere is one voice among many calling for a better home for this museum.

“That pure, independent, curiosity-driven discovery that the Science and Technology Museum provides for a kid — especially a modern-day, Internet-burdened kid — is priceless.”

 

The new Union Development Program

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In 2008, when Isabelle Beaudoin found out she had been accepted to the PSAC’s Union Development Program, her regional vice-president told her, “you’ll see, you’re going to become a great union leader.”

“That sent shivers down my spine,” recalled Beaudoin.

“I was in my late twenties, eager to take on whatever my thirties brought. I took that same fervent energy that I dedicated to union work and applied it to the UDP.”

Beaudoin had been eager to learn all she could about the union world. By the time she had been accepted into the UDP, she had pretty much attended every other training the PSAC had to offer. What followed, she says, changed her union life forever.

“It was the most complete and most rewarding program. It was like a complete overview, in just three weeks, of what I could expect to confront in my next thirty years of union activism.”

From the very beginning, the very diverse group of participants taking the training alongside her started forming very strong bonds. It’s this sort of experience that the PSAC hopes to build upon with some of the improvements it’s bringing to the program.

For the first time, the program is bringing together members from different regions. There are two English courses; one for the western provinces and the territories, another for the eastern provinces and the NCR. A third course will be made up of francophone participants from Quebec, the NCR and Atlantic provinces.

Ultimately, all three groups will meet in Ottawa for three days of training – a key opportunity to network and brainstorm among kindred spirits.

For Dave Burchell, who took the program in 2009, it’s music to his ears.

“That’s huge because, even though the groups haven’t met each other, each individual group has already made bonds – and now there’ll be a collision of entities comparing notes on what they’ve learned.”

“When I read it, I thought ‘Oh, that’s cool! I like that idea.’”

UDP participants will also get the opportunity to participate in a social justice fair, which will provide them a chance to interact and network with community action groups in their region.

Burchell believes this will encourage a more long-term involvement among our activists. He added that most people would get more involved if they had immediate access to such opportunities.

“Most people don’t have time to figure out the steps required to get involved,” he explained. “Often, that’s where we fall down; we say ‘okay guys, go get ‘em’ and everyone stands around going ‘go get who and we’re ready for what?’”

To further promote networking and learning among participants, the new version of the program will usher in the use of social media and web technologies.

But all these tweaks are just improving on possibly the best program PSAC has to offer. All the staples of the tried-and-true UDP are still there; participants can still expect to learn a great deal about labour history, activism and how government works.

For her part, Isabelle Beaudoin still remembers the research paper she presented on the life of Léa Roback, a Canadian labour activist and feminist.

“She’s considered a pioneering feminist in Quebec,” explained Beaudoin.

“There’s a road in Montreal that bears her name; the only road to cross it is Beaudoin Street.”

“Maybe my ancestors were unionists too,” mused Beaudoin. “There you go. Now I know where the fire in my belly comes from!”

To find out more about UDP, please consult your PSAC region’s website. The deadline for applications is October 3; don’t delay!

The truth behind Harper’s go-to-work-sick plan

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We knew this was coming: the government tabled a proposal, last week, that would see our sick leave slashed to just 5 days per year. And forget about banking those (in the unlikely event that you wouldn’t use all of them!).

“Instead of promoting a healthy workplace, the government is once again showing its disdain for its workers and for public services in general,” said PSAC National President Robyn Benson.

Strictly looking at this proposal from a policy perspective, we can see that it oozes of ideology over informed decision-making.

For one, as we keep reiterating, public servants’ use of sick leave is in line with the private sector. The parliamentary budget office recently reported that we use an average of 11.52 sick days per year; our counterparts in the private sector use an average of 11.3 sick days per year.

Paid sick leave is also incredibly important from a public health perspective. For proof, we needn’t look much further than the 2009 H1N1 scare. Xenia Scheil-Adlung and Lydia Sandner, of the World Health Organization, pointed to the following alarming statistics in their 2010 background paper on paid sick leave.

“In 2009, when the economic crisis and the H1N1 pandemic occurred simultaneously, an alarming number of employees without the possibility of taking paid sick leave days attended work while being sick. This allowed H1N1 to spread into the workplace causing infections of some 7 million co-workers in the USA alone. […] Fears of losing one’s job, restructuring, downsizing, and financial worries were identified as reasons for the dangerous and costly presence of the sick at work.”

The same report points out that working while sick leads to reduced productivity: “up to three times higher than loss of productivity due to sickness-related absence”.

A likely outcome of cutting sick days is a high degree of presenteeism: coming to work while sick. Other factors that have been found to lead to presenteeism include heavier workload and concerns about job security related to downsizing and restructuring; situations that are all-too common in this era of public sector job cuts.

At the end of the day, even guilt about missing work contributes to presenteeism. Even when employees have access to paid sick days, 28% of them still show up for work. Without sick days, that number spikes to 48%.

Another study, conducted just last year by University of Pittsburgh researchers, found that the 11.54% of influenza transmission was attributable to the workplace. Presenteeism accounted for 72% of the virus’ spread.

In that study, having access to paid sick days helped decrease the rate of transmission by 5.86% (bear in mind, Americans who have paid sick days don’t have many of them to begin with!). When researchers added an additional day or two, termed “flu days”, more employees stayed home. The rate of transmission decreased by 25.33% in workplaces given one flu day; 39.22% in workplaces given two days.

Over and above providing viruses with a larger breeding ground, presenteeism presents a very real life-and-death risk for individuals who have weakened immune systems, including pregnant women who risk more serious health problems to their unborn baby.

But you don’t need an impaired immune system to suffer the consequences of presenteeism.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health in the US also found that employees who have access to sick leave are 28% less likely to be injured in the workplace.

“Expanding sick leave programs might help businesses reduce the incidence of nonfatal occupational injuries,” the study concluded.

So, let’s just say that there’s a lot of evidence out there against Harper’s “go-to-work sick plan”. But then again, the Harper government’s never been one to be swayed by “facts” and “science”.

Sick leave is incredibly important. Let’s show our bargaining team some solidarity!

A wake-up call for the NAC

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Members of the Union of National Employees at the National Arts Centre voted overwhelmingly in favour of a strike, yesterday. Our union hopes that this is the wake-up call that the NAC needs to iron out a fair deal for our members.

In a recent interview with the Ottawa Citizen, an NAC spokesperson said she is confident a strike can be avoided. However, in the event that our members walk off the job, they’d ensure the NAC remain open.

Our position? Good luck with that!

PSAC National Executive Vice-President for the NCR, Larry Rousseau, says the labour movement would mobilise to shut it down.

“Just watch us go,” Larry Rousseau told the Citizen. “We’re talking about the Public Service Alliance of Canada here. The labour movement will show up.”

There are two issues at the crux of this impasse: the employer isn’t budging on a fair wage increase and won’t extend reasonable job security provisions.

“The 70 members that we represent at the NAC have been more than patient with their employer. They keep being told there’s no money for a fair wage increase –yet this same employer just recently spent $90,000 to develop a new logo,” said UNE National President Doug Marshall.

Our union is hoping that the employer can work with us in good faith to come to an equitable deal. No one wants to strike, but we’re ready to support our members if that’s what it comes to.

The Local will be able to legally strike as of September 24. The UNE represents members who provide maintenance, cleaning, security and parking services at the NAC.

 

Eye-opening interviews

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Over the past few years, we’ve had the tremendous pleasure of interviewing historians, human rights activists, professors, researchers and labour leaders. The articles that were produced from these interviews have helped us understand some tough issues more profoundly.

We’re making improvements to our website to help you access more of the great content we’ve created. That’s why, from now on, we’ll be tagging these types of articles under UNE Interviews. You can access all the articles featuring these types of interviews by clicking here. All categories are accessible using the categories menu on the right-hand side of this page.

Here’s a look at some at just some of the interviews we’ve conducted:

Exclusive: our interview with Hassan Yussuff: This interview was so great, it got picked up by Rabble.ca. If you haven’t read it, you’re really missing out!

Tribal People Under Attack: For this article, we interviewed Ilana Nevins, spokesperson for Survival International, about the dire situation on the Peruvian-Brazilian border that threatens an uncontacted tribe. It’s not too late to take action by sending an email to the Brazilian and Peruvian governments!

International Museums Day: We spent a great deal of time interviewing Terry Quinlan, professor of conservation at Algonquin College, for this piece. The resulting article is an illuminating look at how government budget cuts are having a disastrous effect on our museums and national historic sites.

Injured workers: a painful identity: For this article, we interviewed Sharon-Dale Stone, an associate professor of sociology at Lakehead University. Stone investigated the stigma that is associated with injured workers – especially when the disability isn’t visible. This piece looks at some of the more troubling conclusions and offers advice for combating the stigma.

Are you a history buff?

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If you love learning about the history of the labour movement, you’re in luck: over the last three years, we’ve written a few pieces about important moments in labour history. In fact, they’re among our most popular articles!

We’re making some improvements to our website to help you access more of the great content we’ve created. That’s why, from now on, we’ll be tagging these types of pieces under Labour History. You can access all the articles dealing with Labour History by clicking here. All categories are accessible using the categories menu on the right-hand side of the news page.

Here’s a snapshot of articles we’ve written so far:

Labour Day or Leisure Day: An in-depth look at Labour Day parades over the last century.

May Day: An article about the tumultuous events of May 1886, known as the Chicago Haymarket Affair

Murder in Buckingham: An article investigating how anti-union forces in the early 1900s led to the murder of two union leaders.

The Strike that Rocked Canada: A look at how the Toronto Typographical Union’s 1872 strike led to legal protections under the Trade Union Act.

Do you have a suggestion for a labour history article? Email us at communications@une-sen.org.

 

Labour Day or Leisure Day?

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In their heyday, Labour Day parades were a sight to behold. People lined the streets to see floats that stood as monuments to workers’ individual contributions to society. This was a day when plumbers marched alongside firefighters, in a show of unity among the working class.

But Labour Day parades have always had to compete with one of its main goals: getting time off for leisure. Indeed, for many Canadians, Labour Day is more synonymous with a long relaxing weekend at the cottage than with the labour movement.

“The tension was built at the very beginning,” explained Professor Craig Heron, who teaches history at York University. “It was a celebration of labour that had an implicitly political twist and a day of pleasure.”

“How you keep those things working together is obviously an issue.”

Heron points out that Labour Day was alive and well before Parliament made it an official holiday. In The Workers’ Festival, a book he co-authored with Steve Penfold, Labour Day parades are traced back to the early 1880s, years before the day was officially recognized at the federal level in 1894.

“It was first celebrated in Toronto in 1882, Hamilton and Oshawa in 1883, London and Montreal in 1886, St.Catherines’ in 1887, Halifax in 1888, and Ottawa and Vancouver in 1887.”

Back then, workers were simply asking their local municipality to declare the day a civic holiday.

“Then they would just celebrate it. Workers would take the day off,” explained Heron. “In 1894, [Parliament was] just putting the legal stamp on a fait-accomplit.”

That precious time off was all the more important at the end of the 19th century, when workers didn’t have vacation time – when Saturday was part of your workweek.

“The one-day holidays – Victoria Day, Dominion Day and an August holiday in some parts of the country – those were your only holidays.”

Ultimately, Heron sees the movement for paid vacation as an extension of that initial request for the fall holiday.

With so little time off, Labour Day parades had stiff competition from the get-go. It wouldn’t take long for union leaders bemoan the fact that many chose to spend that day of leisure at the local tavern or pool hall instead. Soon, the labour movement would be competing against a host of other options for holiday fun, where market forces sought to fill a void.

Nonetheless, the parade would draw an impressive crowd. Onlookers could get a glimpse of a craftsman’s work and his tools of the trade. For workers, it was a chance to present themselves as essential cogs in a society of producers. For unionists, it was a show of force for the labour movement – one they hoped would draw more workers into their ranks.

But that would change over the years.

“Labour Day evolved,” explained Heron. “What Steve and I wanted to emphasize in the book was how it was reinvented a number of times.”

The parades of the 1940s were characterized by what Heron referred to as “a much sharper edge” – with fiery protests more akin to today’s May Day demonstrations. After the Second World War, there was an attempt to merge activism with old traditions.

“You’d put on a show that drew on the cultural elements that people expected to see in a parade; you added the clowns, you added the pretty girls in the short skirts,” explained Heron. “Those elements that now look frivolous to us, they co-existed alongside floats that asked ‘What’s going to happen as a result of automation?’ and ‘We need Medicare!’”

Gradually, as the labour movement entered more tumultuous years in the 1970s, the frivolous elements were dropped in favour of more protest activities.

Despite this state of flux, one thing remained constant: Labour Day parades were a grassroots effort, usually led by a local labour council.

In Ottawa, the Labour Day parade is organized by the Ottawa District Labour Council. With the big day just a few days away, Labour Council President Sean McKenny’s voice is already ringing with pride and excitement.

“Everything is free,” said McKenny, urging everyone to attend the festivities. “We have hot-dogs, corn on the cob, bags of chips, soft-drinks and juice for folks – we have a bouncy castle and pony rides.”

Ottawa has been home to a Labour Day parade for well over a century. In recent years, the festivities have followed a standard formula: everyone meets at city hall and marches to a nearby park, where the fun continues.

The event, McKenny contends, puts the emphasis on family and leisure over activism and protest.

“One of the things that we often say around here is ‘we have 360-some-other days of the year to protest and rally; this is a day when we’re going to enjoy ourselves and celebrate all our hard work throughout the year.”

McKenny argues that in Ottawa, the parade is far from dying out. After being involved with its planning for over 20 years, he says the level of participation has undoubtedly increased. Moreover, he hopes that the family-focused attractions will act as an extension of the Canadian Labour Congress’ campaign, which aims to paint a different portrait of unions – one that counters public perceptions of union members as radical and constantly being on strike.

In this vein, Labour Day festivities continue to be an important communications vehicle. In Heron and Penfold’s book, the authors declare that parades “were intended to convey powerful symbolic, largely non-literate messages about appropriate social and political values and acceptable social relationships.”

“In the 1880s-1890s, there were parades all the time in the streets,” explained Heron. “It was a way of communicating. You expected to see parades; you went and watched them. What was on display there, in terms of what people looked like, how they dressed, how they organized themselves, what they were carrying, what they were showing off – all of that was a mode of communicating to the crowd that was watching.”

But in the digital age, where messages can reach a broader audience regardless of their proximity to a downtown core, is there still a place for parades? Could resources be more wisely invested elsewhere?

Professor Heron contends that there is still something very powerful and visceral about people getting together for a public demonstration.

“I think this is part of the debate that everyone is having about social media,” he responded. “It’s a debate we’re having at the university level about online courses – what’s the value of bringing people face-to-face for anything?”

Instead of replacing the act of taking to the streets altogether, social media can be used to bolster that act. Professor Heron pointed to both Occupy and Idle No More as great examples of movements that used these tools effectively to garner more boots on the ground.

“There’s incredible power in having people standing together, walking together, finding each other in a face-to-face environment,” he added. “It can’t be experienced any other way.”

“It does make people feel proud and powerful and capable of greater things. That’s why I think, again and again, in strike situations and in protests, people come back to it as a way to show to the world that there are people who care and feel some solidarity.”

__________________

If this article has inspired you to get involved in your local Labour Day Parade, please contact your local labour district council. In Ottawa, they’re hoping to recruit another 10-20 volunteers.

This article relied heavily on information found in Craig Heron and Steve Penfold’s book, The Workers’ Festival: A History of Labour Day in Canada. Professor Heron is the author of several books on the Canadian labour movement, including The Canadian Labour Movement: A Short History. Incidentally, that book features a few UNE members on the cover!

Thank you to both Professor Craig Heron and ODLC President Sean McKenny for taking the time to speak with us.

 

 

First meeting of the National Executive: Oct 6-10

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The first meeting of the National Executive, this term, will be a bit different than usual. Since many of our union’s leaders are new in their position, we’re taking advantage of the opportunity to do some training – to make sure everyone is on the same page.

If your Local wishes to place an item on the meeting’s agenda, please contact your Regional Vice-President and provide him or her with clear and concise information about the item.

Who must attend?

All of the following must attend: national officers, regional vice-presidents, assistant regional vice-presidents and members of the human rights committee. If you cannot attend, please advise Ateau Zola as soon as possible.

When and where is the meeting?

The meeting will be held from October 6 to 10. In addition, members of the human rights committee will attend a full-day meeting on October 5. Meetings start at 9.am. and conclude at 5 p.m.

Since our boardroom can’t accommodate a meeting of this size, we’re holding this particular national executive meeting and training session in the Salon Royal of the Casino Lac Lemay.

Travel and accommodations

We will take care of reserving a room for everyone at the Hilton Lac Lemay, which is attached to the casino. Officers who reside in the National Capital Region will only have hotel rooms booked for them if they request it.

To make your travel arrangements, please contact WE Travel as soon as possible. If you wish, you can choose to stay overnight at the hotel and leave the following morning if you’re unable to arrive home before 10 p.m. on the day of travel.

When booking your travel, please ensure that you identify yourself as a UNE member. You can contact WE Travel in Ottawa at 1‑888‑676-7747 or WE Travel in Vancouver at 1‑800‑663‑4703 to book your flight.

Expenses

The Union of National Employees will pay for your hotel and flight directly. Members who are getting to the meeting using their own car will have their mileage reimbursed based on the shortest route using the UNE mileage rates. Whether you travel by car, train or bus, we will reimburse actual expenses, up to the most economical airfare that could have been obtained by WE Travel. This amount includes parking at the hotel and any additional per diem and loss of salary. In order to have their transportation costs reimbursed, members must keep all their receipts.

If you require a travel advance, please contact George St-Jean.

Questions?

Please direct all questions related to this meeting to Ateau Zola.

About the National Executive

The National Executive is responsible for the policies, programs and direction of the Union of National Employees. Between conventions, it makes important decisions and creates policies that help look after our union. The executive also carries out resolutions adopted by the members during the last convention. The National Executive meets three times per year to review the union’s activities and ensure that they reflect the will of the membership.