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Canada: Saskatchewan nurses defy back-to-work legislation
By a correspondent
10 April 1999
Nurses in Saskatchewan are defying an emergency back-to-work
law despite the threat of draconian fines.
Just five hours after the nurses walked off the job on a legal
strike Thursday, Saskatchewan's New Democratic Party government
rammed a law through the provincial legislature that strips the
province's 8,400 nurses of their right to strike and imposes a
new three-year contract on them.
Members of the Saskatchewan Union of Nurses, however, voted
unanimously to defy the back-to-work order at a mass rally later
in the day. NDP Premier Roy Romanow, whose government has closed
scores of rural hospitals and otherwise slashed healthcare services,
is posturing as a defender of patients, saying the nurses' action
is placing them at risk. In fact, the nurses are providing essential
services. The government's real fear is that the nurses' militancy
will galvanize opposition among other healthcare workers and the
public at large to the decade-long assault on healthcare and other
public services that all levels of government and parties of all
stripes have mounted. Thursday, the Service Employees Union issued
a 48-hour strike notice on behalf of 10,000 other Saskatchewan
healthcare workers.
Under the back-to-work law, rank-and-file members of the Saskatchewan
Union of Nurses (SUN) are liable to fines of $2,000, plus $400
per each day that they defy the back-to-work order. Their union
can be fined $50,000 and $10,000 per day of defiance.
The NDP law provides for the nurses to receive annual wage
increases of 2 percent per year for the next three years, which
is even less than what the government had offered prior to the
strike. Nurses are demanding wage increases of up to 22 percent
and urgent government action to resolve an acute nursing shortage.
Because nurses in Saskatchewan are so poorly paid in comparison
with those in other Western provinces and much of the US, many
have left the province. Others have retired to escape a heavy
and stressful workload.
The nurses' defiance has thrown the NDP government into crisis.
Thus far, the NDP has refrained from issuing further threats against
the nurses. With much of the public supportive of the strike,
the government no doubt fears a hostile response were it to threaten
to jail nurses. Instead, the social democrats will first turn
to their allies in the trade union bureaucracy to try to maneuver
an end to the strike.
Both the Canadian Labour Congress and the Saskatchewan Federation
of Labour (SFL) have pledged to assist the SUN in paying its fines.
Meanwhile, SFL President Barb Byers has reiterated her organization's
support for the NDP, saying that while the government is "out
of touch," support for the NDP is "official policy."
Significantly, Associate Health Minister Judy Junor is a former
SUN president.
Events in Saskatchewan are being watched closely by governments
across Canada. With federal and provincial governments now recording
their first budgetary surpluses in decades, public sector workers,
who have endured years of job cuts and declining real wages, are
becoming increasingly militant. Big business and their political
representatives are determined, however, to nip this movement
in the bud.
Last week Newfoundland's Liberal government broke a strike
of 4,500 nurses with a back-to-work law. The week before that
the federal Liberal government outlawed a campaign of rotating
strikes by 14,000 federal blue-collar workers.
See Also:
Canada: Liberals adopt emergency
law to end federal workers strike
[31 March 1999]
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