Happy New Year from the Union of National Employees!

Happy New Year from the Union of National Employees!

I wish all the best for you and your family, for our union and for our country in 2012.

I especially want to thank you for all your hard work during the past year. Our union is made stronger because of your determination and unwavering passion for the values we hold dear.

As we begin a new year, I invite you to recommit your efforts to stand up for public services, for workers’ rights and human rights. Take the time to speak to your friends and family about the important work that public service employees do for their country. Also think about inviting others who are committed to justice and fairness to become active in the UNE. While more active members make us stronger, it’s our diversity that makes us great.

Most of all, I hope you enjoy this most precious time to bond with your loved ones and rekindle old friendships.

Doug Marshall,
President

SSO Bargaining

SSO Bargaining

The PSAC has prepared bargaining packages; Statistics Canada has 20 days to respond.

This past Thursday, November 24, the PSAC bargaining teams for the Regional Office and Field Interviewer bargaining units served Statistics Canada with official notices to start negotiations. They have 20 days to respond.

Recently, the PSAC has made great strides in terms of winning rights and protections for part-time, seasonal and other workers that have not traditionally been guaranteed hours of work.

Now it’s our turn. Together, we can make Statistical Survey Operations a better place to work.

If you have any questions, please speak with your Union Representative or a member of our
bargaining teams, or go to www.psac.com.

pdf Download and print this bilingual flyer – share it with other members!

New at the 2012 PSAC Convention: A Members’ Plan

New at the 2012 PSAC Convention: A Members’ Plan

Every three years, the PSAC holds its Triennial National Convention, where delegates from across the union come together, debate issues and set direction for the Union for the next three years.

We will be doing something new at the PSAC 2012 Convention: for the first time, delegates will have the opportunity to debate and adopt a “Members’ Plan”.

The plan is designed to set the direction for the Union for the next three years.

How you can contribute to the Members’ Plan:

  • download, print and post the Member Plan flyer in your workplace
  • fill in the Our Union, Our Power Survey by January 6 and encourage any union member you know to do the same
  • put your ideas on the plan in writing using the private feedback form;
  • talk about the Members’ Plan at your union meetings. You can use the speakers’ notes, and bring the Q&As to help you answer any questions.
  • Take note of any and all ideas for the plan and send them by email to belangs@psac.com or by fax to 613.567-0385. Let us know where the ideas are coming from (a local meeting, a regional committee meeting, etc.).

PSAC Sixteenth Triennial Convention

International Day of Persons with Disabilities

International Day of Persons with Disabilities

My name is Dave Burchell and I am the Union of National Employees Representative for Persons with Disabilities.

I wish to remind you that today, December 3, is the International Day of Persons with Disabilities.

The United Nations Decade of Disabled Persons was held between 1983 and 1992. It urged governments and organizations to make the necessary changes to improve the lives of disabled persons all over the world.

In 1992, as this decade drew to a close, the UN General Assembly proclaimed December 3 as the International Day of Disabled Persons.

In 2007, the assembly changed the name from the “International Day of Disabled Persons” to the “International Day of Persons with Disabilities”. The new name was used the following year.

This year’s theme is “Together for a better world for all: Including persons with disabilities in development”. My personal favourite was in 2004 when the theme was “nothing about us, without us” made a bold statement which rings constantly in my ears.
Canadian census data reveals that the number of persons who reported having a disability reached 4.4 million in 2006, or 14.3 per cent of the Canadian population at the time.

Persons with disabilities face many disadvantages and are still subject to stigma and discrimination. They are largely excluded from civil and political processes and remain overwhelmingly voiceless in matters that affect them.

I hope that you will join me and all other Union of National Employees and PSAC members, persons with disabilities and their allies in remembering the daily struggles we go through to achieve what able-bodied and sound-minded individuals take for granted. It is indeed a challenge for us, but with your help and the assistance of individuals who care, we can all be identified as ‘people, rather than persons with disabilities.

An absurd choice

An absurd choice

Dec 2, 2011 – The PSAC says no giant squirrels were harmed in the making their new social media campaign, but the same cannot be said about public services.

“Right now, the Conservative government is forcing Canadians to choose between a strong economy (no deficit) and strong public services,” wrote PSAC National President John Gordon in an email to union members on Friday. “The goal of the Third Choice campaign is to highlight the absurdity of this forced choice and encourage Canadians to ask for something better.”

The Third Strike campaign kicked off with a quirky video already circulating widely on Facebook and Twitter. It highlights the absurdity of forcing Canadians to choose between no deficit and strong public services.

Visit www.thirdchoice.ca to see the video for yourself! Don’t forget to share the video on Facebook and Twitter and encourage your friends to do the same.

Trans Day of Remembrance

Trans Day of Remembrance

As we approach November 20, the Trans Day of Remembrance, I wish to challenge my union brothers and sisters.

If you truly wish to remember and honour my dead brothers and sisters, then support our battle for human rights equality in this country. They have died due to violence, bigotry, hatred and societal neglect.

Most of you will understand violence, bigotry and hatred. But do you understand societal neglect? It’s a form of abandonment that says “I have my rights, so what’s the big deal?” Have you ever been told you weren’t allowed to use a washroom appropriate to your gender or been asked to leave one because someone told you that you don’t belong there? Have you ever been denied accommodations or been fired for being yourself?

This is a daily fact of life for many in my community. There are segments of society that would make it illegal for me to use a gender-appropriate washroom in public. There are those that would say it’s okay for me to be denied housing or a job because of how I was born.

There are also those that would take more direct action because, somehow, I offend their delicate sensibilities as to what they deem “right” or “normal” or even “acceptable”. Those are the people that beat, maim and kill my brothers and sisters – and would potentially do the same to me.

I do not like having to live my life in a heightened state of awareness, always performing an ongoing threat assessment of those around me. I do not like having to constantly make mental notes of exits and escape routes. But for me, and those like me, that is the world we live in.

Our world is like this because we are denied rights enjoyed by others – fundamental rights that never even cross your mind. In the eyes of many, we are somehow less than human and not deserving of the rights enjoyed by the majority.

I am here to tell you we are as human as the rest of you. I am here to tell you that I am as equal as everyone else around me. Just because I do not fit into some people’s preconceived notions of the binary nature of gender does not mean I deserve to die, be beaten, maimed, spit on, or maltreated.

The labour movement has always fought for equity and equality for all its members. It has been at the forefront of almost every major step forward in advancing the rights of workers. In many cases, these advances have been mirrored legislatively, not long after. Furthermore, these advances have helped to shape human rights legislation in multiple jurisdictions.

To me, this is a fundamental union principle. It’s no different than the fight to bring women into the workplace or the fight for pay equity.

This is about equity and equality for all of us. It is the right thing to do.

So, here is my challenge for you:

  1. Make this a core demand in the next round of bargaining with the employer, and don’t let it be dealt away.
  2. Contact your brothers and sisters in the union, at the local and national levels, and tell them to stand up and do what is right.
  3. Phone, write or email your MPs and tell them that this is an important issue. Ask them to support the reintroduction of the bill explicitly enshrining these rights in the Canadian Human Rights Act.

The question is not “why should we do this?” – the question is “why shouldn’t we?”

We all know this is the right thing to do. Now we just have to do it.

Kate Hart
Human Rights Rep.
Local 30095
Union of National Employees

Make yourself heard

Make yourself heard

The 2012 PSAC Triennial National Convention is fast approaching! During Convention, the delegates will debate and adopt a Members’ Plan. The plan will be based on input and direction from all members of the PSAC.

Now’s the time to make your voice heard! You can contribute to the Members’ Plan by taking the Our Union, Our Power survey.

Click here to answer the survey. Hurry! You only have until December 2, 2011 to share your ideas!

We're occupying Canada!

We're occupying Canada!

“Change is coming!” said one of the activists at the Occupy Ottawa protest.

Recently, the Occupy Wall Street movement spread to major Canadian cities. Members of the Union of National Employees and the PSAC have been there to show their support for the protest and collect signatures for the petition to protect public services. Our union members were also on-site to distribute raincoats to those occupying Confederation Park.

The protesters are tired of how the financial system treats them. They call themselves the 99 percenters: those who don’t have the money to influence elections, affect public policy or buy a politician. The 99 percenters are seeking fairness; they want their government to work on behalf of voters instead of large corporations and millionaires.

In a recent live interview from Wall Street, MSNBC television journalist Dylan Ratigan observed that the U.S. has “an auction-based democracy.” Bringing the point home, Ratigan explained that 94 per cent of the time, the winning presidential candidate is the one who raises the most money. Meanwhile, the Conservatives in this country have abolished the per-vote subsidy. By the next federal election, political parties will be entirely dependent on donations. Are we also heading for an auction-based democracy?

While the troublesome relationship between corporations and government is a key concern, protesters are also concerned about workers’ rights and corporate greed. The first collective statement of Occupy Wall Street reads in part:

They have perpetuated inequality and discrimination in the workplace based on age, the color of one’s skin, sex, gender identity and sexual orientation. […]

They have continuously sought to strip employees of the right to negotiate for better pay and safer working conditions. […]

They have consistently outsourced labour and used that outsourcing as leverage to cut workers’ healthcare and pay.

To find out more about Occupy Canada locations, please visit this website.

If you haven’t already, please sign the PSAC petition to protect public services!

We want your feedback!

We want your feedback!

During last convention, our union decided to change its name. We are all proud that our new name places the emphasis on the people at the heart of our union.

Today, we are reaching out to our members for feedback. We would like to hear your thoughts on the various logo options being proposed. You will be asked, among other things, to think about whether a bilingual logo would suit our union better, or whether two unilingual logos would be preferable.

Please read the questions carefully and take the time to imagine the logo being used on union swag, in the union office, on documents, on the web and on social media platforms.

Please click here to take the survey.

A message for Tony Clement

A message for Tony Clement

Public servants working in Ottawa’s east got to enjoy some delicious food on Wednesday at a Barbeque organized by the PSAC NCR regional office. But burgers weren’t the only thing drawing these federal employees to the event.

“We’re trying to send a message to Tony Clement: enough is enough” said a local PSAC activist.

Treasury Board President Tony Clement is on a mission to cut $4 billion from public services.

What Tony Clement does not understand is that when you cut and destroy public services, you are destroying Canada,” said Larry Rousseau, Regional Executive Vice-President of the National Capital Region. “The PSAC is adamantly opposed to cutting public services to balance the books. The economic crisis was caused by the banking industry – not public service employees,” he added.

In June, Clement said that more public sector layoffs would come. Despite the still fragile state of the economy, the Conservative government seems to think that sending more people to the unemployment line is the way to foster economic growth.

In his June 8 speech, Clement said: “We’ll all need to ask fundamental questions about the programs and services we provide…. Should we still be doing this — and doing it in this way? Does this have to be delivered by this organization? Why does it cost as much as it does? Can we find savings?”

A few months later, the Canadian Press revealed that the Harper government hired Deloitte, an American-based professional organization, to help find $4 billion in cuts. Taxpayers are paying Deloitte $90,000 per day for this service.

And Tony Clement says he wants to find savings….

Please sign PSAC’s the petition to Tony Clement. Let him know that public services matter!