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Quebec nurses enter fourth day of general strike
By Guy Leblanc
30 June 1999
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In defiance of severe anti-strike laws, 47,500 nurses affiliated
with the Quebec Nurses Federation (FIIQ) are undertaking a general
strike, now in its fourth day. The government has threatened to
reconvene the National Assembly at the end of the week to pass
a special law to force the nurses back to work. It has also called
for some of the provisions of anti-union Bill 160 to be implemented.
For each day on strike, nurses would be docked two days of wages;
the automatic union dues check-off would be suspended for 12 weeks;
and every union involved would be fined $125,000, totaling at
least $14 million thus far.
Nurses have worked without a contract since June 1998 and are
demanding a 15 percent wage increase over three years and a 10
percent wage adjustment to bring wages in line with teachers and
social workers. They are also seeking the filling of vacant job
posts, the conversion of large amounts of overtime into more full
time jobs and improvements in job security for the younger nurses.
Since the strike began, the unions have reduced their demands
to 6 percent for two years, with the third year open for negotiations,
and a 7 percent adjustment.
The strike has won important support from the public and thrown
the provincial government into crisis. In May, the Prime Minister
Lucien Bouchard rejected public sector workers' wage demands,
saying "the government will put as much energy and determination
into reducing taxes than it has put in eliminating the deficit."
This was a clear appeal to the more affluent sections of the population
to support him against union demands that austerity measures be
relaxed.
Bouchard has repeatedly said he will not budge from his demand
to limit wage increases to five percent over three years. Fearing
that militancy could spread to other public sector workers if
the nurses succeed in breaking this barrier, the government is
using a propaganda campaign to undermine public support for the
nurses.
"I'm making a solemn appeal to the nurses' sense of responsibility...
We think the health of the population is so important that such
a strike is unacceptable," said Pauline Marois, Quebec Health
minister. "We are waiting now, but not for a long time."
There is great public concern about the impact of a decade
of savage government cutbacks on the health care system. Many
patients must wait nearly two years for an operation, emergency
rooms are routinely overcrowded, the elderly receive minimal or
no home care, and it is common policy for hospitals to close beds
to reduce spending.
The public sees nurses' action as an attempt to forestall further
assaults on social programs. Surveys indicate about 70 percent
of the population support the nurses' demands. Patients are joining
striking nurses on the picket lines and passersby are honking
their horns in solidarity. Doctors' associations have expressed
official support for the strike and have held the government responsible
for the decaying state of the health care system.
The striking nurses have offered to maintain workloads equal
to weekend duty to maintain full coverage for emergencies, intensive
care, birth and dialysis units. We want to tell the population
we are sorry for any inconvenience, but the fight the nurses are
involved in is to maintain a health system that can in one, two
or 10 years, answer the needs of an aging population" said
Jennie Skene, FIIQ president.
Although a tremendous potential exists for a broad mobilization
of workers and middle class people in defense of social programs
and living standards, the FIIQ bureaucracy has no answer to the
government assault on health care. The bureaucracy has appealed
to the government to consider the nurses as a special case and
has isolated them from the struggle of other public service employees.
The FIIQ and other public sector unions bear responsibility
for the condition health care workers face today. Since his rise
to power in 1995, Bouchard has pointed to the government deficit
in order to push through cuts in social programs. Union leaders
have given their full support to Bouchard's zero deficit goal
by year 2000 and offered their own plan to drastically cut jobs.
See Also:
Saskatchewan nurses continue
to defy legal strikebreaking
[13 April 1999]
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