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British Columbia: Ferry workers defy government strikebreaking
By David Adelaide
12 December 2003
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Forty-six-hundred British Columbia ferry workers are striking
in defiance of a provincial Liberal government back-to-work order,
placing them on a collision course with a right-wing government
that has mounted sweeping attacks on public and social services
and workers rights. Already, the ferry workers face the
threat of punitive legal sanctions and the deployment of strikebreakers.
On Tuesday, the Liberal government imposed an 80-day cooling-off
period in the contract dispute between the ferry workers and BC
Ferry Services, a provincially controlled corporation that the
Liberals intend to transform into a shell company through contracting
out and private-public partnerships. Under the Liberals
cooling-off order, the ferry workers have been stripped of their
legal right to strike until March, although during their less
than two day-old strike they had been respecting Essential Services
Legislation requirements that they provide between 40 and 50 percent
of regular service.
The British Columbia Ferry and Marine Workers Union (BCFMWU)
instructed its members to return to work when the cooling-off
order was promulgated, but said that if the order was not rescinded
by noon Wednesday it would call a total strike.
BCFMWU officials met with Labour Minister Graham Bruce Wednesday
morning, but predictably the government refused to budge an inch.
Shortly after the noon Wednesday deadline, the ferry workers walked
off the job.
The ferry company, which was created last March under the Liberals
Bill C-18 (the Coastal Ferry Act), is demanding massive contract
concessions, including significant wage rollbacks, a longer work
week, job cuts and an increased ability to contract out services
normally performed by the unionized ferry workers. In this last
demand, in particular, the ferry company is acting on behalf of
the provincial government, which under Bill 18 specifically instructed
the company to seek alternate business models
and has proclaimed privatization and contracting out to be
central to its self-proclaimed mission of reducing the size of
government.
By way of a pretext for Tuesdays back-to-work order,
the company and the government have alleged that the union, in
its limited job action, was not fully meeting the essential service
levels dictated earlier by the provincial labour board. But in
reality, management had been turning away the normal crews and
insisting on different, less senior staff, in a transparent attempt
to provoke the direct confrontation with the union that is now
taking place.
That the government, through the ferry company, has taken this
openly provocative course, despite the fact that the BCFMWU has
offered much in the way of concessions to the company, including
virtually complete scheduling flexibility, is not at all surprising.
The confrontation with the ferry workers is the latest installment
in the BC Liberals assault on the working class. Since coming
to power in the spring of 2001, the Liberals have imposed contracts
on 45,000 public school teachers, carried out massive layoffs
and restructuring in the health-care sector, and passed a whole
battery of regressive legislation attacking unions and workers
compensation, weakening employment standards, and lengthening
the workday. Early in the new year, thousands of welfare recipients
are threatened with the loss of any benefits under a new Liberal
provision that limits able-bodied persons to receiving
welfare for no more than two years in any five-year period.
BC Ferry Services obtained an order from the BC Labour Relations
Board late Wednesday that proclaimed the strike illegal and banned
all picketing near company property. This is a prelude to going
to the courts to obtain an injunction ordering an immediate end
to the strike. Such action would than allow the union, union leaders
and individual strikers to be threatened with punitive sanctions
including massive fines and possibly jail terms.
Already, some right-wing voices have suggested that the government
should follow the model set by Ronald Reagan with the PATCO air
traffic controllers, and fire all of the striking ferry workers.
For his part, BC Ferry Services CEO David Hahn has threatened
to deploy strikebreakers if the walkout does not end forthwith.
If they continue to stay out, well look for other
replacement crews, Hahn told a press conference. In answer
to a question, Hahn said firings are an option. I think
we get to that at some point, he said.
The Liberal government and the corporate media are accusing
the strikers of holding the 800,000 residents of Vancouver Island
and the provinces economy hostage. But many
workers in BC and across Canada can see through these claims.
The government has deliberately provoked the confrontation with
the ferry workers, intending to use them as an example, whether
by coercing them into accepting massive concessions or by breaking
their union outright.
The BCFMWU has been deluged with offers of support, but the
union leadershipmost importantly the BC Federation of Labour
(BCFL)has said nothing about what workers should do to assist
the ferry workers struggle.
The class war agenda of the Liberal government of Gordon Campbell
has provoked massive popular opposition. But the BCFL and the
social-democratic NDP have squelched even a protest campaign against
the government.
See Also:
British Columbia: Tens of thousands
may be cut off welfare next April
[24 October 2003]
British Columbia Liberals
introduce omnibus anti-worker legislation
[27 May 2002]
British Columbia government
pressing forward with class war agenda
[19 March 2002]
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