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WSWS : News
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America : Canada
Ontario Tories launch massive attack on workers' rights
By Lee Parsons
13 November 2000
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The Ontario Tory government has announced reactionary revisions
to the province's labor code and is in the process of drafting
legislation that will gut decades-old minimum employment standards.
These changes, which are expected to be entrenched in law during
the current session of the Ontario legislature, represent a new
stage in the Tories' assault on workers' rights and will set a
precedent for corresponding actions by governments across Canada
and North America.
The Tories announced their intention to modernize
the Employment Standards Act (ESA), which governs conditions of
employment, in their 1999 election manifesto, Blueprint.
Then last summer they published a consultation paper entitled
Time for Change. Central to the government's plan
is a massive, 25 percent increase in the maximum number of hours
that an employee can be required to work in a given week, from
48 to 60. The consultation paper also raises the possibility that
this maximum may not apply to certain industries such as agriculture
and construction.
While the provision of a legal maximum workweek does not by
itself guarantee workers will not face attempts by employers to
coerce them to work even longer hours, it nevertheless represents
an important legal protection which has stood for over a century.
The proposed increase would set the standard back over 50 years.
The Tories are also proposing to eliminate a provision that
requires employers to obtain a special permit if they want workers
to work more than 12 hours a day.
In place of the current daily and weekly work limits, the government
is considering a scheme under which employers will have the discretion
to transfer or average out hours of work over a three-week
period. In other words, a company could compel its workers to
work 60 hours one week, 48 the next and 72 hours in the third,
and still be considered not to have exceeded the 60-hour maximum
workweek.
The government is also proposing to eliminate the one
day's rest in seven act and replace it with a requirement
to provide only 48 consecutive hours of rest every two weeks.
This is to be combined with new regulations governing vacations
and overtime pay that, in the name of freedom of choice, will
make workers susceptible to employer pressure to waive their traditional
rights and accept less costly alternatives. Thus workers are to
be given the freedom to take their holidays one day
at a time, rather than in a block, if requested by their employer.
In addition, workers will be given the right to take
time off in lieu of overtime pay, effectively eliminating the
added overtime cost for employers.
The suggestion by the Ministry of Labour that these changes
are intended to bring democracy and choice into the workplace
is a transparent fig leaf. Some 500 businesses and institutions
surveyed by the government's Red Tape Commission identified reform
of the ESA as a top priority to improve the province's competitive
position and attract investment. The ESA reform will
gut legal protections for workers that were adopted not only to
provide a better quality of life but ensure some modicum of safety
at the workplace, while lowering labor costs and payroll taxes
for business and at workers' expense.
The rationale advanced that these changes give new rights
to workers is based on the lie that the wage-labor relationship
is a free one, in which the worker and boss are equals, not a
social power relationship. When the Tories and the employers talk
about making the labor market more flexible, they mean that workers
should be placed even more at their employers' beck and call.
The proposed gutting of the ESA will remove legal obstacles to
increased exploitation and place individuals far more frequently
in the position of having to negotiate their own terms of employment.
Under conditions where job security has been all but eliminated
and the protection accorded by unemployment and welfare benefits
greatly diminished, employers will be able to pressure and terrorize
workers into doing their bidding.
In claiming that the striking down of decades-old minimum employment
standards conforms with modern realities, the Tories are, with
unintended irony, letting slip the truththe reality of capitalism
is such that as labor becomes more productive, and wealth expands
exponentially, the global struggle for profits necessitates an
all-out reversal of workers' rights.
A broadside against the unions
In a decisive blow against an already compliant trade union
movement, the Tory government introduced legislation November
2 which would cripple trade union rights and facilitate union-busting.
An amendment to the Labour Relations Act, Bill 139 stipulates
that:
- in all unionized workplaces, notices must be prominently
posted explaining the procedures to be followed for decertification;
- the window for union decertification is to be increased from
60 to 90 days;
- when a union certification drive fails, there is to be a
one-year cooling-off period before another is permitted;
- in cases where workers are negotiating a first union contract,
separate votes must be held on the employers' contract proposals
and whether to strike;
- employers that don't sell construction services, i.e., municipalities,
schools, banks, etc., are to be allowed to tender work on their
construction projects to nonunion contractors.
- the salaries and benefits of all union officials making in
excess of $100,000 annually will henceforth have to be publicly
disclosed.
With its open promotion of decertificationi.e., union-bustingthe
Tories have broken the collaborative relationship that has existed
at least since the Second World War between the unions, employers
and government.
The union response to Bill 139, as to the consultation paper
on the ESA, has been predictably indignant, but to date the Ontario
Federation of Labour has outlined no strategy on how it intends
to fight the changes. Instead, the OFL is proposing to diffuse
the anger of workers with what it is calling an I didn't
vote for that campaign, in which workers will be asked to
cast a vote against the labor code changes in a mock vote.
Since torpedoing the province-wide teachers strike in the fall
of 1997 and winding up, shortly thereafter, the anti-Tory Days
of Action, the union bureaucracy has repeatedly signaled
that it desperately wants to work with the Tory government. The
Tories, however, have spurned the bureaucracy's offers. Indeed,
only after a protracted internal debate did they drop a plan to
include in Bill 139 abolition of the Rand Formulaa move
which, by threatening the unions with bankruptcy, would have had
the most immediate impact on the union officialdom's privileged
position. (A compromise reached in 1946, in the immediate aftermath
of the unionization of basic industry, the Rand Formula provides
for automatic dues check-off in exchange for the unions renouncing
the demand for a closed shop.)
Other representatives of the ruling class argue, however, that
a new assault on an already compliant union movement is inadvisable,
first and foremost because it could lead to an eruption of bitter
struggles against union-busting that ultimately could give rise
to a working-class counteroffensive. Secondly, because they fear
that the marginalization of the union bureaucracy will corrode
its ability to contain the class struggle within the sterile framework
of protest politics and collective bargaining.
Speaking against Bill 139, Liberal Opposition leader Dalton
McGuinty declared, There's been 25 years of peace and stability
by and large in Ontario when it comes to labor relations.... If
everything is working so well, why fix it? It ain't broke. Why
screw around with it?
A spokesperson for the social-democratic New Democratic Party,
David Christopherson, indicated his party's basic acceptance of
the Tory offensive. In a request put to Labour Minister Chris
Stockwell, the NDP proposed that Bill 139 stipulate that the rules
for unionization be posted in all nonunion workplaces, just as
the rules for de-unionization are to be posted where unions exist.
In reply to an NDP call for public hearings on the labor legislation,
Stockwell responded, I will have as much public hearings
on this bill as you had on the social contract, referring
to the NDP's 1993 legislation that cut the wages and suspended
the collective bargaining rights of 1 million public sector workers.
See Also:
The
Ontario Tory government and the crisis of working-class perspective
in Canada
Part 1: The Tories intensify their class-war assault
[22 May 2000]
The
Ontario Tory government and the crisis of working-class perspective
in Canada
Part 2: The political lessons of the 1995-97 anti-Tory movement
[25 May 2000]
Ontario:
the fight against the Harris
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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