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Ontario Tories open door to 60-hour workweek
By a correspondent
30 March 2002
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Recent changes to Ontarios labour standards have emboldened
employers to press for a lengthening of the workweek, giving rising
to a series of strike struggles.
Under Bill 147, which came into force last September, Ontarios
Tory government removed longstanding limits on the length of the
workweek. In the name of providing greater flexibility and choice,
the Tories have given employers the right to ask workers to labour
up to 60 hours a week without the need for special Ministry of
Labour permission, and changed the way in which overtime pay is
calculated to the detriment of workers. Under the Tories
averaging provision a worker could work 60 hours in
a given week and not receive a dime in overtime pay.
Last December, 92 workers at ADM Agri-Industries of Windsor,
Ontario, went on strike after the company demanded a 60-hour workweek.
Then in January, workers at the Bath, Ontario, cement plant of
Lafarge Canada Inc. struck over company overtime demands, including
a requirement that they all carry pagers so management could summon
them to work in the event of production difficulties. According
to the president of Local 219-O of the Communications, Energy
and Paperworkers Union, the average employee at the Bath plant
currently logs three to four hundred hours of voluntary overtime
a yearthat is annually performs overtime equivalent to seven-and-a-half
to ten additional 40-hour workweeks.
The Ontario Tories Employment Standards 2000 Act rolls
backs decades old provisions that provided workers with
limited, but nonetheless significant regulatory protection from
employer demands and sets a precedent for similar attacks by other
state and provincial governments across North America.
Legislation limiting the working day was a fundamental conquest
of militant labour struggles going back to the early part of the
19th century. The first Canadian legislation giving protection
to unions emerged in 1872 in the aftermath of an unsuccessful
agitation for a nine-hour daya common demand of the 1860s
and 1870s in both Europe and North America. The eight-hour day
was primarily a result of the struggles of the 1920s and 1930s.
That the eight-hour day is now under attack testifies both
to the ferocity of the present big business offensive, and to
the impotence and connivance of the trade unions and social democrats.
Under the new act, a business and its employees can agree
that the mandatory workweekthat is the number of hours an
employee must put in when requested or face possible disciplinary
actionis 60 hours. Previously, a special permit was required
if the mandatory workweek exceeded 48 hours. As before, overtime
pay is to apply to hours in excess of 44 per week. However, this
is subject to a barrage of exceptions and special arrangements.
Averaging agreements are the first of these exceptions and
special arrangements. According to this section of the act, if
the employer and the employee agree to do so, the
employees hours of work may be averaged over a period of
not more than four weeks for the purpose of determining the employees
entitlement, if any, to overtime pay.
Each averaging agreement will have an expiry date not more
than two years after the time of agreementa date before
which the agreement cannot be revoked unless both parties (employee
and employer) agree.
To add insult to injury the bill includes a section providing
that employees may be compensated for each overtime hour by an
hour-and-a-half of paid time off work at some point within 12
months of the workweek in which the overtime occurred. In other
words, the employer is free to ask (and the employee free
to agree) for the withholding of payment for labour
until up to a year after the time the labour in question was performed!
A few examples: A worker might work 60 hours one week, 50 hours
the next, 35 in the third week and 30 in the fourth week, and
agree under the averaging provision to
receive no overtime pay, instead of 22 hours overtime pay. A worker
working 60 hours a week for three weeks, followed by a fourth
week without work, might agree to receive only three
hours worth of overtime pay (as opposed to 48!), and might also
agree not to receive that pay for up to 12 months
(at which point it will come in the form of paid time off).
Why would someone agree to be paid less? Bill 147 is based
on the fiction that the contractual relationship between employer
and employee is one between equals and into which the two parties
freely enter. In the real world, of course, the employer
and the employee stand on distinctly unequal ground: the worker
who does not work goes without food, or is evicted, or becomes
homeless; the capitalist, meanwhile, has a vast pool of persons
at his disposal whose only means of livelihood is the sale of
their labour-power.
Bill 147 gives employers a green light to use everything from
suggestions that business is difficult or a promotion may be in
jeopardy to the threat of layoffs and firings to coerce workers
into agreeing to a mandatory 60-hour workweek and
the averaging of overtime hours.
Furthermore, it should be remembered that the Tories have made
these changes at a time when job security is largely nonexistent
and the protection once afforded by unemployment and welfare benefits
has been greatly eroded.
Dismantling occupational health and safety
The Tories gutting of Ontarios employment standards
legislation is at a piece with their dismantling of the protections
accorded workers under the Occupational Health and Safety Act.
Last summer, in an act that they portrayed as a piece of housekeeping
legislation (Bill 57 or The Government Efficiency Act)
the Tories took a wrecking ball to the regulations governing workplace
health and safety. There is no longer any requirement that government
officials make on-site inspections when workers complain of unsafe
working conditions. Under Bill 57, inspections can be carried
out by telephone. Also, abolished is a requirement that an employer
inform the Ministry of Labour whenever a new chemical or biological
agent is introduced into the workplace. Bill 57 strips the provincial
director of occupational safety of the power to order health and
safety assessments of new chemicals. Last but not least, much
of the regulatory regime governing occupational health and safety
has been replaced by non-binding codes of practice.
In an open letter to Premier Mike Harris, Ontario Federation
of Labour President Wayne Samuelson warned that Bill 57 will
result in an increased number of deaths, injuries and illnesses.
He also noted that the bill had been proclaimed law the very day
that Harris had been called to testify at the inquiry into the
Walkerton tragedy, which was a direct consequence of the governments
dismantling of the regulatory regime governing water-testing.
However, the pledges of Samuelson and other union leaders to mount
a struggle to defend the gains in occupational health and safety,
which were won as a result of worker mobilizations in the 1960s
and 1970s, proved to be empty bluster.
Other recent Tory legislation, Bills 31 and 139, attacks the
right of workers to organize in trade unions. Among other things,
Bill 139 requires that notices be put up in all unionized workplaces
describing the procedure by which employees can initiate the decertification
of their union. Predictably, the amendments do not stipulate that
signs describing the process by which a union is formed and certified
be placed in non-union workplaces.
See Also:
Canada: Workers and unemployed protest
outside Tory conference
[26 March 2002]
Ontario Premier resigns
Amid mounting legal and political crises
[23 October 2001]
Ontario premier stonewalls
inquiry into Walkerton deaths
[20 July 2001]
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