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Quebec nurses protest against tentative pact
Union leaders conspire with government to end militant strike
By Guy Leblanc
21 July 1999
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The 47,500 members of the Quebec Federation of Nurses (QFN)
are voting today, July 21, on a contract settlement with the Parti
Québécois provincial government. Aproved by 600
QFN delegates last Saturday by a margin of just 62 percent, the
proposed settlement has been widely condemned by rank-and-file
nurses as a sellout of their struggle to secure better working
conditions and defend public healthcare.
On Friday, dozens of nurses demonstrated outside the union
delegates' meeting to press for the continuation of their three-week-old,
provincewide strike. Some urged the broadening of the nurses struggle
to include the other 350,000 Quebec public sector employees currently
in contract negotiations. Come help us, because we are in
trouble, said an emergency nurse from Centre Hospitalier
Saint-Eustache. At several healthcare institutions, picketing
nurses placed a black X on their placards effacing the QFN's name.
To demobilize the nurses and thwart the organization of rank-and-file
opposition, the QFN leadership ordered the nurses to return to
their jobs Sunday afternoon, pending the outcome of the ratification
vote. However, at one major Montreal-area hospital, Sacré-Coeur,
nurses have refused to comply with the union leadership's order
and remain on strike. I cannot understand that they could
consider this agreement sufficient, explained the president
of the QFN local at Sacré-Coeur. Not when you consider
the sanctions we face [for having struck in defiance of a battery
of antiunion laws] and the anguish that led to this strike.
Following a meeting Tuesday at which union officials reported
on the proposed settlement, nurses at the Hôpital de Chicoutimi,
in eastern Quebec, also walked off the job.
The tentative settlement was the product of a week of maneuvering
by the union and the government, in which it became increasingly
evident that the QFN bureaucrats and the PQ politicians were allied
in seeking to end the strike. First, the QFN leadership took up
Quebec Premier Lucien Bouchard's suggestion that they call a 48-hour
truce so as to facilitate negotiations. (The government had insisted
throughout that it would never negotiate with a union on an illegal
strike.) Then it abandoned the nurses' demands at the bargaining
table, accepting for all intents and purposes the PQ's wage offer
of 5 percent over three years and agreeing that an additional,
special compensation package, to which the government had already
agreed in principle, should be the object of a two-year government
study.
When the end of the 48-hour truce came Thursday morning, QFN
leaders claimed they had the elements of an agreement in principle.
But by Friday morning, it became clear that that agreement would
not win the support of the union delegates, so the QFN leadership
appealed to the government to return to the bargaining table.
Anxious to bolster the by now shaky authority of the QFN executive,
Health Minister Pauline Marois immediately accepted the union's
offer. The QFN called a further eight-hour truce Friday
evening and on Saturday morning, union and government negotiators
emerged to say a new settlement had been reached.
Under this agreement, the government has withdrawn a $35 million
interim pay package that was to tide the nurses over until the
completion of the two-year compensation study. Instead the government
has agreed to a provisional deadline of November 15 for completing
the study's first stage. However, caps have been set, stipulating
the maximum increase the government study group can order during
the first year. At most, the vast majority of nurses will receive
an additional 2 percent pay rise in the coming year. There are
no minimums.
QFN leaders have claimed that nurses have made gains in working
conditions. But the PQ government has pledged to hire only 1,000
additional nurses, meaning staffing levels will remain well below
what they were before mid-1997, when 3,500 high seniority nurses
took early retirement as part of the government's cost-cutting
drive.
Moreover, the union sellout does not provide for any lessening
of the sanctions nurses face for defying Bill 160, a law limiting
strikes in Quebec's public sector, and Bill 72, an emergency back-to-work
law passed July 2. Should the tentative pact be accepted, nurses
will in effect be financing much of their gains through
fines and other penalties. Although the union is providing essential
services, meaning that 90 percent of the nurses have remained
on the job during the strike, all nurses are automatically being
docked two days' pay for every day of the strike. According to
one estimate, each nurse is currently facing financial penalties
of in excess of $7,500 or about a fifth of his or her yearly salary
The QFN, its affiliates and individual union representatives also
face tens millions of dollars in fines and other penalties.
In an editorial published last Saturday, admittedly before
the details of the second tentative pact had been made public,
The Montreal Gazette, Conrad Black's local daily, exulted,
The deal that Mr. Boucahrd offered the nurses Thursday is
terrible for them.
Rank-and-file nurses are angered, shocked and not a little
bewildered by the events of the past week. Up until last Thursday,
QFN President Jennie Skene was viewed by many nurses as, if not
a hero, at least the incarnation of their opposition to the government.
Now she is routinely castigated. Read one picket sign Friday:
Skene I can think for myself and it's NO.
What most dismays nurses is that the QFN leadership moved to
torpedo their struggle at the very point when the government was
totally isolated. Four professional organizations that the government
asked to condemn the strike chose instead to deplore the crisis
in Quebec's healthcare system created by two decades of budget-cutting.
Even the capitalist press has had to concede there is mass popular
support for the nurses and that most of the population has been
indifferent to the government's attempts to witch-hunt nurses
for taking patients hostage and tar them as lawbreakers.
It is precisely because the strike was becoming a challenge
to the PQ's government's socioeconomic agenda and risked to become
a catalyst for a general rebellion among public sector workers
against job- and wage-cuts and the dismantling of public services
that the QFN leadership moved so decisively and ruthlessly to
scuttle it.
Like the rest of the trade union leadership in Quebec, the
QFN bureaucracy has traditionally supported the pro-indépendentiste
PQ. The past president of the QFN, Diane Lavallée, was
a PQ candidate in the 1994 provincial election, and the head of
Premier Bouchard's constituency office, Nancy Lavoie, is a former
QFN vice-president. QFN leaders joined with their counterparts
at Quebec's labor federations in endorsing the PQ government's
objective of eliminating Quebec's deficit by the year 2000 and
thus are themselves complicit in the dismantling of healthcare.
See Also:
Quebec nurses return to work under
48-hour truce"
Union bureaucracy seeking to defuse challenge to PQ
[14 July 1999]
Quebec nurses' strike at a turning point
[8 July 1999]
Quebec nurses enter fourth
day of general strike
[30 June 1999]
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