Election results are in!

elections

Elections took place today, on this fourth day of the UNE 2014 convention. Here are the results of those elections:

National Positions
National President Doug Marshall
National Executive Vice-President Kevin King
National Vice-President for Human Rights Geoff Ryan
Assistant National Vice-President for Human Rights Daniel Toutant
National Advisor for Parks Canada Eddie Kennedy

 

Alberta, N.W.T. and Nunavut
Regional Vice-President Dave Burchell
Assistant Regional Vice-President Jaison Van Tine
Assistant Regional Vice-President Angad Hundal
Regional Representative for Human Rights Genevieve Babineau
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Chantal Favelle-Rubenstahl
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Meghraj Khadka
PSAC Delegate Jason Van Tine
PSAC Delegate Kate Hart
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Stefan Jensen
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Angad Hundal

 

Atlantic
Regional Vice-President  Angela Decker
1st Assistant Regional Vice-President (NB-PEI)  Mike LeBlanc
2nd Assistant Regional Vice-President (NL)  Bill Bennett
3rd Assistant Regional Vice-President (NS)  Craig Cameron
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Annette Brown
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Melinda Scott
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Anna Migas
PSAC Delegate Kate Hartigan
PSAC Delegate Matt Cook
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Jeff Reid
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Eddie Kennedy
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Mike LeBlanc
4th Alt. PSAC Delegate Susan Evans

 

British Columbia and Yukon
Regional Vice-President  Jennifer Chieh Ho
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Brian Bakker
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Allan Combres
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Shirley Torres
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Amit Deo
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Dylan Meryerhoffer
PSAC Delegate Andy Yung
PSAC Delegate Dylan Meyerhoffer
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Amit Deo
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Allan Combres
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Céline Ahodékon

 

Manitoba
Regional Vice-President  Christopher Little-Gagné
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Martin Kaminski
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Melody Raabe
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Jacqueline Nanali
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Loretta Moar
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Cheryl Dubree
PSAC Delegate Martin Kaminski
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Melody Raabe

 

NCR-Separate Employers
Regional Vice-President Patrice Rémillard
Assistant Regional Vice-President André Miller
Assistant Regional Vice-President Jasmin Richer
Regional Representative for Human Rights Carl Laguerre
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Evelyn Beckert
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Mathieu Laurin
PSAC Delegate Ghislain Roussel
PSAC Delegate Mylène Séguin
PSAC Delegate André Miller
PSAC Delegate Edward Bradbury
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Gilbert Leduc
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Mélanie Drouin-Dion
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Jamie McDougall
4th Alt. PSAC Delegate Jasmin Richer
5th Alt. PSAC Delegate Evelyn Beckert

 

NCR-Treasury Board
Regional Vice-President  Richard Ballance
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Cindy D’Alessio
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Roman Laroche
Regional Representative for Human Rights  June Dale
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Richard Lynn
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Karine Oluyole
PSAC Delegate Roman Laroche
PSAC Delegate Tim Warmington
PSAC Delegate Karine Oluyole
PSAC Delegate June Dale
PSAC Delegate Suzanne Arsenault
PSAC Delegate Cindy D’Alessio
PSAC Delegate Sandrine Oka
PSAC Delegate Hayley Millington
PSAC Delegate Suzanne Cadieux
PSAC Delegate Richard Lynn
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Beverly Brown
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Sylvie Clément
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Nicole Dubé
4th Alt. PSAC Delegate Robert Gagnon
5th Alt. PSAC Delegate Andrew Gibson
6th Alt. PSAC Delegate Katherine Cyr
7th Alt. PSAC Delegate Julie Bordeleau
8th Alt. PSAC Delegate Victoria Murphy
9th Alt. PSAC Delegate François Deschênes
10th Alt. PSAC Delegate Nicole Cléroux

 

Ontario
Regional Vice-President  Mary Anne Walker
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Diane Levola
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Andrew Shaver
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Craig Reynolds
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Sandy Bello
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Carrie Vasey
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Andria Meskauskas
PSAC Delegate Diane Levola
PSAC Delegate Andrew Shaver
PSAC Delegate Sandy Bello
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Michael Freeman
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Tom Buckley
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Craig Reynolds

 

Outside Canada
Regional Vice-President  Karl Lafrenière
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Rose Touhey
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Heather Brooker
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Isabelle Beaudoin
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Dianna Brown
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Paul Thomas
PSAC Delegate Heather Brooker
PSAC Delegate Rose Touhey
PSAC Delegate Isabelle Beaudoin
PSAC Delegate Gordon McAllister
PSAC Delegate Kenton Little
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Stéphane Allard
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Paul Thomas
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Shahrzad Sedigh
4th Alt. PSAC Delegate Dianna Brown
5th Alt. PSAC Delegate Archie Campbell

 

Quebec
Regional Vice-President  Yvon Beaudoin
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Yann Boudreau
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Julie Dubois
Regional Representative for Human Rights  Keith Lemoine
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Carole Maillet
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Nathalie Bouchard
PSAC Delegate Diane Labrecque
PSAC Delegate Yann Boudreau
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Géraldine Fortin
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Nathalie Bouchard
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Julie Dubois
4th Alt. PSAC Delegate Colyn Tucker-Steele
5th Alt. PSAC Delegate Mélanie Laroche
6th Alt. PSAC Delegate Etienne Mathieu

 

Saskatchewan
Regional Vice-President  Omar Murray
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Gloria Pfeifer
Assistant Regional Vice-President  Janette Husak
Regional Representative for Human Rights Sandra Ahenakew
1st Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Pearl Yuzicappi
2nd Alt. Regional Representative for Human Rights Kate Johnson
PSAC Delegate Pearl Yuzicappi
1st Alt. PSAC Delegate Gloria Pfeifer
2nd Alt. PSAC Delegate Audrey Berlovan
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Bonnie Molson
3rd Alt. PSAC Delegate Melissa Brandt

Convention news you can use!

conv_news

Convention is well under way. Our members’ brains are overflowing with synaptic action from all the great debates we’ve had and rousing speeches we’ve heard.

You can download the newsletters by using the following links:

Edition 1 – August 12, 2014
Edition 2 – August 13, 2014
Edition 3 – August 14, 2014
Edition 4 – August 15, 2014

These newsletters are made possible by the tremendous work of UNE volunteers: Rudy Depakakibo, Safia Haji-Dayib, Jay Lamothe and Cate Watrous.

There are also tons more pictures on Flickr and great discussions happening on Twitter thanks to this hashtag: #UNE2014.

August 14: Multiculturalism Day at the UNE

multi2014

August 14 is Multiculturalism Day at the Union of National Employees. During our last convention, our members passed a resolution to celebrate our union’s diversity each year on August 14.

We hope you take the opportunity to find out more about the rich cultural mosaic in which we live. To help you promote the occasion, we’ve created a lovely poster for you to download, print and post in your office.

 

Tribal people under attack

WID_2014

This International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, Survival International is calling attention to some of the tribes who fell victim to genocide. The international organization, which advocates on behalf of tribal people worldwide, fears history could repeat itself if urgent action isn’t taken to protect a particular tribe on the Brazilian-Peruvian border.

Early last month, Survival International learned that a formerly uncontacted tribe (a tribe that had no previous contact with industrialised societies) reached out to the Ashaninka, a neighbouring tribe in Brazil.

“This uncontacted tribe said that they left their home because their elders had been massacred by non‑Indians and that all their homes had been burned,” explained Ilana Nevins, spokesperson for Survival International. “There were so many people killed that they couldn’t bury them all – that those who couldn’t be buried had been picked at by vultures.”

The organization suspects that illegal loggers and cocaine traffickers are the likely culprits of this flagrant level of violence. Many of the area’s tribal people have already been pushed further into the forest as illegal logging and drug traffickers encroach on their land.

In addition to violence, isolated tribes that come into contact with people from industrialized societies are highly susceptible to introduced diseases. In the mid 1990’s, more than half of the Nahua people were wiped out following their first contact with loggers.

Seven tribal people who made contact last month were already showing signs of influenza, a disease to which they have no acquired immunity. FUNAI, the Brazilian government body charged with protecting tribal territories and their people, treated five young men and two young women for the disease.

With 70 uncontacted tribes within its borders and 14 million hectares of land (roughly two-and-a-half times the size of Nova Scotia), FUNAI has a daunting task – and not enough funds to do it. But Nevins says things have been improving.

“There are people – FUNAI staff – that care deeply that making sure these people and this land is protected,” said Nevins. “But that’s not enough; right now, there aren’t enough funds to make sure that all the uncontacted land is being monitored – that illegal loggers, miners and other people focused on resource extraction are kept out of this land.”

Survival International would like to see the Brazilian government allocate more funds to FUNAI. At present, they are calling on the government to urgently re-staff a government outpost that was overrun in 2011 by illegal loggers and drug traffickers.

The staff there was working to monitor and protect the land where the uncontacted tribe is believed to have resided.

Survival International is asking people to sign and send an email to the Brazilian and Peruvian governments, calling on them to monitor and protect these uncontacted tribes and their land.

In March of this year, the Peruvian and Brazilian governments signed an agreement to cooperate on cross-border monitoring and protection.

“So far this has not been sufficient to ensure that these people are protected,” concluded Nevins.

Members can find out more about Survival International at www.survivalinternational.org. You may also be interested in other articles we’ve written about tribal people, including: Rethink Your Vocab and last year’s article on oil exploration encroaching on the Matsés’ land, which is located within Peruvian borders.

National Executive Meeting

natexec_quick

The National Executive will meet from August 7 to 9, before the start of convention. The meeting will be held in the Saanich Boardroom, located on the first level of the Victoria Conference Centre.

If your Local wishes to place an item on the agenda, please contact your Regional Vice-President and provide him or her with clear and concise information. He or she will gladly bring your item before the executive.

Where to get convention news?

convnews

 

With convention fast approaching, this strikes us as a good time to share our game plan for reporting on convention proceedings.

As with all our conferences, we’ll be producing a daily newsletter. We’ve already recruited some amazing volunteers to help us produce four editions of The Review: the UNE’s official conference newsletter. This newsletter will be distributed daily to convention participants; it will also be published on our website to allow everyone else to find out the day’s highlights.

Look for electronic editions of The Review on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday mornings (by 10 a.m. Pacific time, 1 p.m. Eastern time).

Election results will be posted on our website on Thursday; they’ll also be featured in Friday morning’s edition of The Review.

For those who want more up-to-the-minute news, we encourage you to dip your toe into the Twittersphere. We plan on live-tweeting during convention; this means you can find out about the fate of resolutions, get key quotes from guest speakers, and receive election-day updates all in real time.

Remember: you don’t need a Twitter account to read our tweets. You can follow our twitter stream by clicking here or by clicking the Twitter link on our main page. You can follow the conversation by keeping an eye on #UNE2014.

If you’re really interested in keeping up with all our latest news, please like our Facebook page and sign up for our e-newsletter.

 

Going to convention? Bring a sweater!

sweaters

It may be August and we may be holding convention in beautiful British Columbia; but it can get a little chilly at night!

If you’re headed to convention, please remember to make space for a sweater or a light jacket in your suitcase. After a long day’s work on Tuesday, August 12, delegates will head to Fort Rod Hill for a beach party. That’s when that sweater or jacket will definitely come in handy.

Convention binders now online!

binders_online

That’s right! All the documents contained in your convention binder are now online. This includes all the committee reports, convention procedures and activity reports.

Plus, there’s also a helpful convention information section that is worth checking out before heading to convention!

How well do you know the UNE?

howwell

With over 60 different workplaces under its wing, the UNE is hands down the most diverse union within the PSAC.

We recently added an “About our members” section to our website; it highlights every workplace we represent across 14 different sectors.

Be sure to check it out; we’re sure you’ll find out something about our membership that you didn’t know before!

Liar liar, pants on fire (round 2!)

TONY_2E

Looks like Tony Clement’s pants are on fire once again!

Another one of Tony Clement’s lies bit the dust yesterday thanks to a report by the Parliamentary Budget Office. The report echoed what we’ve been saying all along: federal public service sick leave costs almost nothing.

The report revealed that most public servants aren’t replaced while on sick leave; that’s hardly a revelation to most of us, we know!

There are, of course, some departments that do backfill employees due to operational requirements. That said, the report contends that the cost of doing this would only be significant if it “exceeded $500 million government-wide or 10 per cent of a department’s budget.”

The department with the highest sick leave-related costs averaged 2.74% of overall department expenditures, with most core public service departments falling anywhere between 0.16% to 1.5%.

That’s a far cry from 10%!

What’s even more revealing is that Correctional Services Canada and Canadian Border Security Agency, the two departments where employees use the most sick leave, clearly have unique workplace hazards that could easily explain the higher occurrence.

The Parliamentary Budget Office also reiterated its findings from an earlier report; public servants use an average of 11.52 sick days per year; a number in line with the private sector’s 11.3 sick days per year.

You can find out more by consulting the following articles:

Civil servant sick leave costs minimal for taxpayers, report says – Globe and Mail
Public Servants’ sick days immaterial to Ottawa’s bottom line, report says – CBC