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Ontario Tories deny farm workers trade union rights
By David Adelaide
6 January 2003
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Ontarios Tory government has enacted legislation to deny
farm and agricultural workers the most elementary trade union
rights. Under Bill 187, euphemistically named the Agricultural
Workers Protection Act, farm workers may combine to form
associations, but they are legally prohibited from striking. Moreover,
employers are not required to recognize these associations as
sole bargaining agentsthat is to negotiate with them. The
legislation, passed on November 18, 2002, was supported by the
opposition Liberals and opposed by the New Democratic Party (NDP).
Ontarios farm workers currently number approximately
100,000, and are among the most oppressed and exploited members
of the working class. They are the lowest paid workers by occupational
grouping in the province, and suffer a high rate of workplace
accidents, injuries, illnesses and fatalities.
Over 10,000 of the farm workers (14,500 in 2000) are migrant
workers brought from the Caribbean and Mexico under the auspices
of the federal Commonwealth Caribbean Seasonal Agricultural Worker
Program and the Mexican Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program.
Ninety percent of the workers who come to Canada under these programs
come to work in Ontarios agricultural industry. According
to Ann Weston of the North-South Institute, most of them were
paid $6.90 an hour during the 1995-1999 period.
In passing this recent legislation, Ernie Eves Tory government
is upholding a long tradition of denying farm workers the right
to form unionsOntario farm workers have never had the right
to strike.
The NDP provincial government of Bob Rae (1990-1995) introduced
legislation allowing farm workers to form unions, but the social
democrats stopped short of giving these unions the right to strike.
Instead, the legislation insisted on a process of final offer
selection under which an arbitrator chooses from proposed collective
agreements submitted by the union and employer.
Passed in the final months of the NDP government, the farm
workers bill was much more in way of a sop to the union
bureaucracy than a concession to the working people. The social
democrats came into headlong conflict with the working class,
cutting billions from public services, imposing wage and job cuts
on one million public sector workers by government fiat, increasing
taxes and initiating the shift from welfare to workfare. One of
the unions most open in supporting the NDP in its attacks on the
working class was the United Food and Commercial Workers, the
same union that had been lobbying for legal recognition of union
bargaining rights in the farm sector.
The social democrats profoundly disappointed and disoriented
working people, thereby opening the door for the coming to power
of the Tories under Mike Harris on an extreme right-wing program.
Indeed, the Harris Tories Common Sense Revolution
was explicitly modeled after the Gingrich Republicans Contract
with America.
For the Tories, even the very limited collective bargaining
rights afforded farm workers by the NDP legislation were an affront.
Among their first actions as the party of government was the repeal
of the NDP farm-worker legislation, along with the repeal of an
NDP law prohibiting the use of scabs.
In stripping farm workers of any union rights, the Tories claimed
to be defending the traditional family farm. But at issue then,
as now, is not organizing family farms but rather organizing workers
employed in industrial-scale farming and food processing operations.
In Ontario, a mere 10 percent of the farms employ 50 percent of
the agricultural workers.
The only successful attempt to organize farm workers to date
was a drive by the United Food and Commercial Workers Canada (UFCW)
to organize 200 workers at the Highline Produce mushroom factory
in Leamington, Ontario. The 1995 Tory legislation was effective
retroactively and the Highline Produce workers union lost
its recognition as a bargaining agent.
The UFCW responded with a legal challenge on the basis of the
Canadian constitutions Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In
an 8-1 decision issued December 2001, the Supreme Court of Canada
ruled that the Tory legislation of 1995 violated the Charter rights
of agricultural workers in two ways: it violated their right to
freedom of association and their right to equal treatment under
the law. The court stipulated that the Tories had 18 months to
bring the provinces legislation into line with the Charter.
In passing the Agricultural Employees Protection Act of 2002,
the Tories followed the letter of the Supreme Court decision while
nevertheless depriving farm workers of any means to struggle for
better wages and working conditions.
Michael J. Fraser, the director of the UFCW Canada, has denounced
the new legislation and vowed to mount a new court challenge,
Without the right to join a union and engage in collective
bargaining, Ontarios 100 000 agricultural workers are no
better off than they were seven years ago when the Harris government
took away these rights. UFCW Canada did not spend years in court
and half a million dollars in legal fees to have the Ontario government
tell us that agricultural workers have the right to join a club.
But the UFCW leadership is quite content to accept the legal
prohibition against farm workers striking or otherwise mounting
job action. Says Fraser, Tory Labour Minister Helen Johns
also chose not to acknowledge my commitment that UFCW Canada would
agree, as we had under the former NDP governments Agricultural
Labour Relations Act, to a binding mediation/arbitration process
for resolving differences between unionized agricultural workers
and their employers.
In other words, the union bureaucracy is no more interested
than are the Tories in giving farm workers the most basic weapons
of trade union struggle, let alone in mounting a serious industrial
and political struggle against the oppressive conditions under
which they must work.
See Also:
Inquest indicts Ontario
Tories in welfare death
[23 December 2002]
Ontario Tories re-impose
cap on electricity rates
[7 December 2002]
Toronto: NDP and union
leaders strangle city workers strike
[15 July 2002]
Hydro One debacle
highlights crisis of Ontario Tory regime
[25 June 2002]
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