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33,000 public sector workers strike in Ontario
By Lee Parsons
19 March 2002
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More than 30,000 Ontario provincial workers walked off the
job March 12 in one of the largest strikes of its kind in Canadian
history. Although the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)
has over 45, 000 members, a large portion of its workers, including
ambulance dispatchers, lab technicians and water treatment workers,
are prohibited from striking because they are deemed to be in
essential services.
On the key issue of wages, the union last week lowered its
demand from 6 percent to 5 percent in each of the next two years.
The government has offered yearly increases of only 1.95 percent
in a three-year contract. For 1,700 nurses and skilled workers
it has offered one-time raises of 10 percent and 8 percent respectively.
Other major issues in the dispute include job security and pension
provisions.
The OPSEU leadership, headed by Leah Casselman, has portrayed
the strike as a defense of public services. The union says staff
shortages caused by years of job cuts have endangered public safety
in areas such as water and soil testing. This is substantiated
in a recent report from the government-commissioned Walkerton
Inquiry in which the actions of the Ontario Tories were cited
as contributing to the deaths of seven people from e-coli contamination
last year. The Tories continue to claim that no such dangers exist
but have nevertheless demanded that testing and other essential
services continue during the strike.
The union is also objecting to the awarding of a $194 million
overhaul of the provincial welfare system to Andersen Consulting,
the accounting firm at the center of the ongoing Enron scandal
in the US. By all indications this could be a protracted strike
and the union is resting on a strike fund of $27 million, which
it has amassed since the last province-wide strike by 55,000 OPSEU
workers in 1996. That action, which lasted five weeks, was hailed
as a victory by the same union leadership despite the acceptance
of massive job cuts by over one quarter of its members. Coming
on the heels of the election of the new Tory government, the defeat
set the stage for an all-out assault on workers in the province.
Throughout six years of job cuts, privatization and downsizing
outlined in the Tory common sense revolution, the
trade union movement has been virtually paralyzed in the face
of a legislative onslaught which has gutted workers rights
and working conditions.
After filing six applications, the government won rulings from
the Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB) last Wednesday preventing
strikers from delaying traffic across picket lines for more than
10 minutes. The court rulings also compel workers to abide by
essential service provisions. There have been reports that essential
service workers such as ambulance dispatchers and lab technicians
have withdrawn services in some centers. Union President Leah
Casselman has denied there have been any violations and said her
members will comply with the orders.
Contract talks broke down last Tuesday, prompting the union
to call a strike beginning at midnight. No new talks have been
scheduled. The strike comes in the middle of a Tory leadership
race to replace outgoing Premier Mike Harris who, after the last
year of political debacles, will resign from office when a new
leader is chosen March 23. Harris is currently away on vacation.
Labour Minister Chris Stockwell, who is also a leadership candidate,
has said that if he becomes premier he will not change the employers
offer.
The government will not return to session until next month
and there have been no indications that there will be any legislated
end to the strike in the near future.
See Also:
Workers
Issues in Canada
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