Government of Canada to Invests over $289,000 in High Speed rural communities

Source : Newswire.ca…read the article here

 

Ontarians in rural communities to benefit from increased connectivity

OTTAWA, ON, June 9, 2021 /CNW/ – The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted how much we rely on our connections. Now more than ever, Canadians across the country need access to reliable high-speed Internet as many of us are working, learning, and staying in touch with friends and family from home. Right now, too many Canadians living in rural and remote communities lack access to high-speed Internet. Through the Universal Broadband Fund (UBF) Rapid Response Stream, the Government of Canada is taking immediate action to get Canadians connected to the high-speed Internet they need.

Today, Francis Drouin, Member of Parliament for Glengarry–Prescott–Russell, on behalf of the Honourable Maryam Monsef, Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Rural Economic Development, announced over $289,000 in federal funding to bring high-speed Internet to 601 underserved households in the communities of Crysler and St-Albert, Ontario. Bell Canada is investing an additional $867,000 in this project.

Click the above link for the full article

Fairness on the Line: Supplement

From Unifor National

It’s Time for a Real Federal Ban on Scabs

Unifor’s recently launched anti-scab campaign was met with widespread enthusiasm across Canada. Our campaign resonated because workers from all walks of life understand that their right to unionize and collectively bargain is undermined if employers are simply able to hire scabs to replace them. Apart from B.C. and Quebec, no Canadian jurisdiction has meaningful anti-scab legislation in place, and even the two existing provincial examples contain significant loopholes that effectively allow scabs to be used. This is something that has to change.

A few responses to our campaign have suggested that we overlooked the existence of anti-scab language at the federal level within Part I of the Canada Labour Code. Yet, despite being titled “prohibition relating to replacement workers,” the language in question offers the barest of restrictions on the use of scabs, which essentially implies no prohibition on the use of scabs at all.

The purpose of this supplementary piece to our research paper on anti-scab legislation, Fairness on the line: The case for anti-scab legislation in Canada, is to provide an assessment of the existing language at the federal level and explore why it fails to offer any meaningful restrictions on the deployment of scabs in the federally regulated private sector.

Unpacking the Labour Code’s Inadequate Approach to Replacement Workers

Section 94 (2.1) of Part I of the Canada Labour Code states the following:

No employer or person acting on behalf of an employer shall use, for the demonstrated purpose of undermining a trade union’s representational capacity rather than the pursuit of legitimate bargaining objectives, the services of a person who was not an employee in the bargaining unit on the date on which notice to bargain collectively was given and was hired or assigned after that date to perform all or part of the duties of an employee in the bargaining unit on strike or locked out.”

Even a cursory reading reveals that this passage in the Canada Labour Code does not prohibit the deployment of scabs. In fact, it places the impossible task upon a union of proving that the employer is using scabs to undermine the union’s representational capacity. In other words, as long as the employer is deemed to be pursuing “legitimate bargaining objectives” – i.e. they express their intention to continue bargaining during a strike or lockout, whether or not they are actively at the table, they can deploy scabs when and where they wish. The language in Section 94 (2.1) reflects the principle that an employer has a legal right to use scabs during a lawful work stoppage to put economic pressure on the union to achieve its bargaining objectives. (For example, see TELUS Communications Inc. 2004 CIRB 271).

Co op members in snow suites with unifor vests holding a locked out sign.This is certainly not the ban on the use of scabs that Unifor and other trade unions have called for. In fact, it would strain credulity to refer to the provision above as even a restriction on the use if scabs since employers can merely offer assurances that they are interested in resolving the labour dispute while actively undermining the bargaining process through the deployment of scabs. In effect, employers in federally regulated sectors are able to use scabs as long as they make hollow gestures to indicate that they believe in the bargaining process.

The fundamental problem with Part I of the Code’s approach to the use of scabs is that it mistakenly suggests replacement workers are only a problem when they are used by employers to undermine a union’s representational capacity. This is patently false and ignores the primary reason for resorting to the use of scabs, which is a strategy that erodes the legitimacy of the bargaining process itself: scabs are deployed to undermine a union’s bargaining power.

In other words, there is a contradiction at the heart of the Canada Labour Code’s provision on replacement workers. The passage in question allows employers to use scabs as long as they pursue legitimate bargaining objectives, but the very deployment of scabs delegitimizes the bargaining process and allows the employer to circumvent it entirely.

Unpacking the Labour Code’s Inadequate Approach to Replacement Workers

Why does this contradiction exist? At its core, the Code’s provision on replacement workers misconstrues the logic of union representation and fails to grasp the importance, and economic sting that comes with the right to withdraw labour as part of the collective bargaining process.

The very purpose of unions is to provide workers with a collective means of defending their rights and negotiating better working conditions through union representation and collective bargaining. Embedded in these rights is the acknowledgement that in the absence of unions, there is an inherent power imbalance between employer and employee that employers are often able to exploit to their material benefit.

However, these rights are not enough to level the playing field. On their own, union representation and collective bargaining cannot force an employer to the bargaining table or to bargain in good faith. Without the right to strike – i.e. the right to collectively withdraw our labour – workers have no real leverage over employers who refuse to bargain fairly or who do not respect the bargaining process.

The Supreme Court of Canada concurred and deemed the right to the strike to be constitutionally protected in 2015, stating the following:

“The right to strike is an essential part of a meaningful collective bargaining process in our system of labour relations. The right to strike is not merely derivative of collective bargaining, it is an indispensable component of that right. Where good faith negotiations break down, the ability to engage in the collective withdrawal of services is a necessary component of the process through which workers can continue to participate meaningfully in the pursuit of their collective workplace goals.”

The use of scabs is a direct attack on the right to strike. By hiring replacement workers, an employer can simply nullify any Jerry Dias walks out scabs in 2018impact that our withdrawal of labour might have on their operations. Allowing employers to use scabs effectively negates the right to strike and ensures that employers are able to bargain whenever and however they choose. The use of scabs therefore serves to uphold the power imbalance in favour of the boss who can then circumvent the labour relations process and bypass collective bargaining entirely. Many examples of this can be found in our research: Fairness on the line: The case for anti-scab legislation in Canada.

There is an even greater power imbalance at play when employers deploy scabs during lockouts. A lockout should be considered a drastic last measure, when an employer has exhausted all other options to reach a fair and reasonable settlement. However, if employers are free to lockout their unionized workers and deploy scabs without legal repercussions, they can minimize their own financial risks and circumvent the normal bargaining process.

Ultimately, Section 94 (2.1) of the Canada Labour Code fails to recognize that the primary logic behind the deployment of scabs is to negate the collective bargaining power of unions by circumventing our right to strike, thereby preserving the inherent power imbalance that exists in favour of employers. There can be no legitimate pursuit of bargaining objectives by an employer so long as they believe the withdrawal of our labour is a mere inconvenience that they can get around by hiring scabs.

A True Federal Prohibition on the Use of Scabs

workers locked out 22 months as employer uses scabsIn the place of Section 94 (2.1), Unifor has called for a true prohibition on hiring replacement workers that would ban the use of scabs in all its forms. As our paper illustrated, there are both Canadian and international examples of legislation that restrict or prohibit certain forms of scabbing. However, even the recent private members’ bill, Bill C-234, An Act to amend the Canada Labour Code (replacement workers), does not go far enough. While it follows the strongest existing approach to scab prohibition by modelling its language after Quebec’s anti-scab provisions, it leaves a significant loophole by permitting the use of managers as scabs. As we noted, some of the longest labour disputes in Quebec’s history have occurred in recent years, with employers having been able to draw out labour disputes by hiring scabs.

What we are calling for is no less than a full ban on the use of scabs. As long as there is an ongoing labour dispute, employers must be prohibited from hiring or deploying any employee or manager to perform the tasks and duties of a bargaining unit member, whether that employee or manager is inside or outside of the bargaining unit or has been contracted by another company.

Unless such a ban is in place, our constitutionally protected right to strike will continue to be undermined and deep inequalities in favour of employers will continue to prevail at bargaining tables across Canada.

Unifor calls for Reliance Home Comfort boycott in Ontario

June 9, 2021

TORONTO—Until Reliance makes a fair offer in contract negotiations and ends the lockout of more than 800 workers across Ontario, Unifor encourages customers to take their business elsewhere.

“This greedy employer could end this lockout tomorrow with a fair offer to junior staff,” said Jerry Dias, Unifor National President. “Ontario’s Reliance customers should go elsewhere for their HVAC needs until the lockout is over.”

Reliance Home Comfort caused the impasse by refusing to reduce the gap between compensation of junior and senior employees. With the skyrocketing cost of living in most regions, Unifor Local 1999 members have made it a priority to ensure the younger staff have decent wages and benefits to support their families.

To support the Ontario-based boycott campaign, Unifor has launched dontcallreliance.com. The site is a resource for the public to learn more about the company’s tactics and has information for Local 1999 supporters to contact senior Reliance management.

“Ontario HVAC customers have options. We prefer they use unionized providers, but Reliance needs to feel financial pressure to get them to the table,” said Naureen Rizvi, Ontario Regional Director. “Our tactics will continue to escalate until we see a fair offer from Reliance.”

Unifor Local 1999 represents HVAC service technicians, installers, water heater installers, plumbers, electricians and administration staff at 13 locations across Ontario.

Unifor is Canada’s largest union in the private sector, representing 315,000 workers in every major area of the economy. The union advocates for all working people and their rights, fights for equality and social justice in Canada and abroad, and strives to create progressive change for a better future.

Ontario court rules in favour of workers, strikes down Doug Ford’s pre-election period

June 8, 2021 – 12:00 AM

TORONTO – In a decision today, the Ontario Superior Court rightly struck down the restrictions on Third Party political advertising prior to an election period that were included in Bill 254.

“While today’s decision is a relief, the fact remains that Premier Ford should have never introduced this undemocratic, unconstitutional attack on the rights of workers and their unions,” said Jerry Dias, Unifor National President. “From day one, Ontario’s workers and unions told MPPs that this Bill infringed on their rights and would never hold up in court.”

The bill severely and aggressively targeted third parties through a massive expansion of the pre-election period, restricting all political or issue-based advertising for 12 months before an election. It also included a unreasonable re-writing of the definition of collusion to prohibit third parties from “sharing information” or sharing a common vendor.

“With today’s decision, Ontario voters are protected against the conservative’s attempt to both silence their collective voices and shield the Premier from justified critiques that his government  deserves,” said Naureen Rizvi, Unifor Ontario Regional Director. “In order to make our province better, and for our elections to be free and fair, voters must be able to engage fully in public political conversations.”

Rizvi told a legislative standing committee in March about many of the issues facing Ontario workers, including capped salaries and changed working conditions for health care workers, precarious minimum wage retail jobs and challenges encountered by gaming and hospitality workers in regulated industries.

Today’s decision was issued by Justice Morgan for the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, in response to a challenge by Working Families Ontario, a coalition of trade unions including Unifor, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and other unions.

In 2009, the B.C. Court of Justice struck down legislation limiting third party advertising during a 60-day pre-election period because it impaired freedom of expression and would capture unrelated advertising. The Ontario Bill 254 pre-election period that was struck down would have been in force for 365 days before an election period.

Further information:

Read Unifor’s release, Conservatives double-down with amendments to Bill 254, the ‘Squashing Ontario Democracy Act

Read Unifor’s Submission to Attorney General Downey and the Standing Committee on the Legislative Assembly.

Read Jerry Dias’s March 10 blog on how Bill 254 seeks to tip the scales in favour of the PC Party.

Read the revised text of Bill 254.

NEB Statement on Vaccine Certificates and Considerations to Guide the Re-Opening of Canada’s Economy

 

May 2021

The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a profound effect on Canada’s economy and, critically, the health, safety and security of workers.

Canada’s slow-moving vaccine rollout has clearly delayed economic re-start efforts, relative to other nations. However, new vaccine shipments entering Canada will greatly improve access in the near term. As health professionals work to vaccinate a critical mass of residents in the coming months, Canada must consider how to safely and gradually lift restrictions, open up businesses and get workers back to work.

Establishing a National Framework

Unifor encourages government to consider all available options that enable the safe restart of services and moving unemployed workers back into jobs.

This includes the implementation of certificates of vaccination in sectors where similar programs already exist (e.g. international air travel) along with others that may be well served by them, complemented by strict pre-screening measures along with diagnostic testing.

Various efforts to establish such certificates are underway in several jurisdictions and within industries. It is imperative that all levels of government in Canada work together to establish a framework and clear guidelines that support a seamless and consistent application of certificates that best coordinates a beneficial re-start to the Canadian economy.

Science must guide Canada’s re-start efforts

The prospect of fully reopening Canada’s economy is positive news for tens of thousands of Unifor members working in hospitality, gaming and passenger transportation – and millions more nation-wide – devastated by layoffs and loss of income due to service restrictions. For the first time since the start of this pandemic, a return to work appears within reach.

Despite the obvious economic advantages of a quick and safe return to work, Unifor recognizes that strong scientific evidence must underpin such efforts, to avoid the risk of potentially debilitating consequences should vaccines prove non-durable and unable to prevent transmission.

Unifor also encourages government officials to resolve the valid concerns laid out in the March 2021 Chief Science Advisor’s report regarding vaccine certifications. The Chief Science Advisor helpfully outlined a series of issues, including those related to equity, the appropriateness of application among vulnerable populations, personal privacy and data protection as well as human rights that may be incompatible with certain forms of vaccine certification.

Governments must balance these considerations against public health and the economic well-being of residents, to ensure fair and equal treatment.  Such actions must not contravene the Charter of Rights and Freedoms or human rights statutes.

Toward ‘critical mass’ immunization

Unifor recognizes that until vaccines reach a critical mass of people in Canada, we cannot expect business-as-usual. Our union commits to further supporting the federal vaccination program, encouraging voluntary worker vaccinations throughout the country and removing barriers to vaccination.

Unifor will also continue to promote greater vaccine access throughout the world, urging governments to explore all options, including the easing of intellectual property barriers to encourage greater domestic vaccine production and supply, especially in underserved jurisdictions.

Workers need a seat at the table

As dialogue toward an economic re-start continues between government officials, health experts and business organizations, it is imperative that labour unions and community health advocates have a seat at the table.

This multi-stakeholder approach to workplace health and safety has served Canada well since the onset of the pandemic, and must continue.

All individuals must remain vigilant in adhering to public health guidelines and take necessary personal safety precautions to stay safe and prevent community spread. Governments and employers must do their part and act with haste to provide critical supports, including permanent paid sick days.

Government must foster a fair, inclusive and resilient recovery

The pandemic has exposed major fault lines in Canada’s physical, legislative and social infrastructure, including inadequate employment standards (e.g. paid sick days), a frayed social safety net (e.g. unemployment insurance supports) and diminished domestic supply chain for necessary goods (e.g. personal protection equipment, medicines and critical goods). These obvious gaps, long dismissed by governments, only made a bad situation worse.

Unifor recognizes that this pandemic will not be over for anyone, until it is over for everyone. As such, we commit to relentlessly championing progressive, practical and principled policies to repair these deficiencies and facilitate a safe return to work in the spirit of building a fair, resilient and inclusive economy.