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Canada: State assault on public sector workers
Strikes illegalized, wages and jobs slashed
By David Adelaide
30 April 2004
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On Canadas Atlantic and Pacific coasts, right-wing provincial
governments have introduced draconian legislation this week to
break strikes by public sector workers and impose massive wage
and job cuts.
In Newfoundland, the Tory provincial government introduced
legislation Monday to force an end to a four-week-old strike by
a total of 20,000 civil servants and hospital, highway maintenance
and other public sector workers. Bill 18 explicitly threatens
any worker with dismissal who refuses to return to work on the
terms dictated by the Tories. It also provides for massive fines
to be levied against union leaders and the two unions involved
in the dispute should they not instruct their members to return
to work.
The legislation imposes a contract that freezes the workers
wages for the next two years and provides for annual increases
of just 2 and 3 percent in the final years of a four-year contract.
The government-dictated contract also halves the number of sick
days.
When the threat of back-to-work legislation was first raised,
leaders of the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Public
and Private Employees (NAPE) and the Canadian Union of Public
Employees (CUPE) indicated they would counsel defiance. In
the event that [Premier Danny Williams] resorts to the legislature,
NAPE President Leo Puddister told a union rally, I will
say to [union] members that you should not go back to work.
However, no sooner was Bill 18 tabled than the union leadership
changed its tune. Although the bill is still before the Newfoundland
legislature, NAPE and CUPE have ordered their members to return
to work, and as of Thursday all picket lines had been taken down.
Puddister and the union leadership have attempted to present this
capitulation as a piece of cunning maneuvering that will undermine
the legitimacy of the government-imposed settlement. Emboldened
by the unions capitulation, Williams has agreed to delay
passage of the legislation until next Monday, in the hopes that
the unions will, for at most a few crumbs, tell their members
to swallow the governments terms.
The draconian stance of the Tory government was entirely predictable.
One of the Tories first actions upon taking office last
fall was to impose a spending freeze. This was followed shortly
thereafter by a public-sector wage and hiring freeze. Immediately
before the start of the strike, the government tabled a budget
that calls for a thousand public sector jobs to be cut in the
2004-2005 fiscal year and a total of 4,000 to be eliminated over
the next four years.
In British Columbia, the Liberal government of Gordon Campbell
adopted a strikebreaking law early Thursday morning that is even
more draconian than that of the Newfoundland Tories. Not only
does the BC legislation order the immediate end to a four-day-old
strike by 43,000 health care workers; it imposes on them an 11
percent pay cut and a one-and-a-half-hour increase in the workweek.
The lengthening of the workweek is equal to a further 4 percent
cut in payfor a total wage cut of 15 percent. Last but not
least, the government-imposed contract gives the provinces
health boards the unfettered right to contract out the hospital
workers jobs. According to the government, the wage cut
and increase in the workweek alone will reduce its labor costs
by C$200 million a year.
Thursdays law is only the latest volley in the Liberals
assault on public and social servicesa campaign that goes
hand-in-hand with their push to slash corporate and personal income
taxes. In 2002, the Liberals passed legislation, Bill 29, that
rewrote the health care workers existing collective agreements
to eliminate all restrictions on the contracting out of work.
Since then, some 6,000 health care workers have been laid off
and, during the four months of negotiations that preceded this
weeks strike, a further 2,500 hospital workers were given
lay-off notices.
Patricia Jense, a housekeeper at a hospital in Victoria, B.C.,
who was recently laid off, told the CBC: There are people
with like 27, 30 years [seniority]and were being chucked
out like a piece of meatthrown out on the street.
Most of the strikerswho include orderlies, cafeteria
and cleaning staff, and techniciansare represented by the
Health Employees Union (HEU). Nurses respected the hospital workers
picket lines for the strikes first four days, but once the
Liberals rushed their antiunion legislation into law, the British
Columbia Nurses Union (BCNU) instructed its members to return
to work.
Yesterday, hospital workers remained off the job in defiance
of the Liberals strikebreaking legislation. To resounding
cheers, HEU leader Chris Allnut told a rally of hospital workers
outside Vancouver General Hospital that they should not report
for work: I want to be perfectly clear what the union is
instructing members to do.... You are to respect the protest lines
until we decide that you should go back to work.
Allnuts wording makes it clear that the issue for the
union leadership is not if, but when, it will capitulate. The
HEU has offered no strategy to broaden the strike, let alone called
for the political and industrial mobilization of the working class
in B.C. and across Canada in defence of public health care and
the jobs and wages of the workers who administer it. On the contrary,
the union leadership has repeatedly said it is ready to accept
some contracting out, and in a clear signal that it is preparing
to terminate the hospital workers struggle, has ceased calling
their job action a strike, referring to it instead as a protest.
See Also:
British Columbia:
Unions suppress ferry and forest strikes
[18 December 2003]
British Columbia government
pressing forward with class war agenda
[19 March 2002]
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