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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Strike collapses at Calgary Herald
By Lee Parsons
4 July 2000
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After eight months of a bitter first contract fight, the strike
by about 90 workers at the Calgary Herald went down to
ignominious defeat late last week. The strikers lost the fight
for a union contract and now have the choice between a cash buyout
or an uncertain future at the Herald with virtually no
protections.
The vote to end the 236-day strike was widely split, with 32
percent voting to continue the fight despite the recent capitulation
of their union on the key issue of seniority. They were offered
the choice of returning to work with a union contract providing
1 or 2 percent wage hikes but no job security, or to oust the
union with the option of a buyout package providing a maximum
of 68 weeks pay and a minimum of 13 weeks.
With the vote to end the strike without a union it is expected
that most will take the buyout, since it has been made clear that
many jobs will be eliminated even if workers choose to return
to work. Management has informed the union that the formerly 143-person
newsroom will continue to employ the reduced staff of 90 to 95
that has been operating since the strike began last November.
A recent letter from Herald management to the Communications,
Energy and Paperworkers Union (CEP), which led the strike, stated
that "Formal performance standards dealing with everything
from decorum to productivity have been put in place for every
job category.... Reporters who are not capable of producing three
assigned or enterprise stories in the course of a standard seven-hour
shift without moving into overtime are deemed to be performing
below standard."
Andy Marshall, president of CEP Local 115A, said, "[This]
is chilling for journalists and employee rights generally. We
think this could only have happened in the legislative and political
environment that lives in Alberta, where the labour laws are weak
and where there is no will to enforce employee rights." The
union has called the deal a surrender package.
But the defeat of the strike cannot be attributed solely to
anti-labor laws in BC. Both the local and national union leaderships
blocked any broader movement of the working class in defense of
the Calgary Herald strikers, and the leaders of the other
unions at the newspaper actually aided management in breaking
the strike by newsroom employees.
Last month, the two Graphic Communications International Union
(GCIU) locals, representing pressmen and distribution centre workers,
voted to ratify the Herald 's settlement offer and union
leaders sent their members across the newsroom employees' picket
lines. The four-year deal accepted by the GCIU called for a total
of 10.5 percent in wage increases, but included an increase in
workloads for pressmen who will move from a four-day to a five-day
workweek.
Despite pledges by Alberta and national unions to defend the
Calgary Herald workers against the union-busting campaign
by publishing magnate Conrad Black, the union officials did nothing
outside of organizing a boycott campaign, a strategy that has
led to numerous defeats for striking newspaper workers in Canada
and the US.
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