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Canada: Telus workers confront ferocious assault on job security
By David Adelaide
31 August 2005
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Twelve-thousand five-hundred Telus workers in British Columbia
and Alberta have been walking the picket lines since July 21.
The conflict has been provoked by Telus, the largest telecommunications
company in western Canada, with the intention of busting the union
and shredding what few obstacles remain to the contracting out
of any part of the companys operations.
In spring 2005, Telus management bypassed the workers
union, the Telecommunications Workers Union (TWU), in order to
directly propose to the workers a contract that would
have gutted previous restrictions on contracting out so that only
permanent employees would have any job security. Even this was
to be subject to numerous further limits and qualifications, such
as that only current work (as opposed to future work)
would be protected.
Despite going nearly five years without a contract and despite
a modest pay increase that was subsequently dangled as an incentive,
the majority of Telus workers rejected the companys concession-laden
offer. In June, the company escalated the dispute by engaging
in soft lockout measures, including withholding pay
for the first day of sick leave and reducing shift premiums. The
workers then began to withhold some services, such as overtime
work.
Telus next threatened to unilaterally impose its contract offer
on July 22. The workers response to this bald provocation
was to walk off the job the day before the imposed conditions
were to have taken effect. The company then locked out the workers,
announcing that it will not resume negotiations with the union
until the picket lines are taken down.
Telus has retained the services of the Accufax International
Group (AFI), a private security firm that specializes in strike-breaking,
i.e., hiring replacement workers, transporting scabs and management
through picket lines, and harassing and intimidating picketers.
A striker told the World Socialist Web Site, On the picket
line the biggest and most disheartening thing for me is the security
guards that Telus has hired to watch, videotape, intimidate and
harass the locked out workers ... They are there 24/7. They follow
us continually. He further explained that in the months
leading up to the strike-lockout, Telus management had installed
security cameras in various work locations in anticipation of
the confrontation it was plotting to provoke.
In the early days of the walkout the company obtained an injunction
limiting picketing in British Columbia. The company also attempted
to use its position as a major internet service provider for BC
and Alberta to block access to the Voices for Change website,
a union discussion forum organized by Telus workers. The site,
along with 750 unrelated websites, was blocked for all Telus internet
customers. At first, Telus denied the attempted censorship, only
to later admit it, claiming that the measure was necessary to
protect the identity of a handful of workers who have crossed
the picket lines.
The website was subsequently unblocked as part of an out of
court settlement between Telus and Voices For Change, under which
Voices of Change agreed to remove any photos that could be used
to identify workers who had crossed the picket lines. Shortly
thereafter, management invited television news reporters directly
into the workplace in order to show the very same workers at work,
as part of an attempt to bolster its claim that a large section
of the Telus workers have broken ranks with the strike.
Telus antiunion offensive points to a major intensification
of the class struggle and underlines the urgent need for workers
to adopt a new strategy to defeat the ever-widening big business
assault on jobs and working conditions.
The telecommunications industry, in particular, is undergoing
substantial transformation under the pressure of two factors.
First, there are continuous improvements to technology, many of
which have served to undermine the traditional monopoly of telecommunications
giants such as Bell Canada and Telus. Of especial importance in
this regard is the development of Voice Over IP (VOIP) technology,
which has facilitated the emergence of new long-distance and local
telephone companies offering lower rates.
The second factor is the continuing impact of the dot-com stock
market crash of 2001. The late 1990s saw a massive influx of capital
into the telecommunications industry and consequent rapid expansion
of infrastructure as investors sought to reap whirlwind profits
from mounting share prices. Since the bubble was punctured, the
industry has been confronted with declining profits, a problem
that threatens to persist due to the large excess of infrastructure.
Faced with these conditions, the telecommunications companies
have turned to fierce competition and a mounting drive to increase
the profits they squeezed from their shrinking workforces. Bell
Canada, historically based in the eastern half of the country,
is making efforts to penetrate western Canada, which is dominated
by Telus. At the same time, Telus is attempting to increase its
presence in Ontario and Quebec, where Bell once had a monopoly.
This competition for markets has been accompanied by a wave
of mergers and rationalizations. In the US, Verizon
acquired MCI, SBC merged with AT&T, and the number of large
carriers has shrunk to only three from more than ten a decade
ago. In Canada as well, large companies are swallowing smaller
ones in an effort to diversify their technology, overcome competition,
and reduce labour costs. The present-day Telus is itself the result
of a merger of British Columbia-based BC Tel with the former Alberta-based
Telus.
In every instance, the response of the union leadership to
the inevitable and systematic assault on their members livelihoods
has been to confine the workers struggle within the framework
of collective bargaining with a single employer. The result has
been an ongoing series of bitter defeats.
In late spring of 2003, a year-long strike by technicians at
Vidéotron resulted in a concession-laden deal that gave
the company increased ability to contract out work and imposed
punishing wage cuts. Last summer, a five-month long strike by
workers at Aliant, Atlantic Canadas largest telecommunications
company, ended in the ratification of a six-year contract that
failed to bar the company from contracting out, the central objective
of the strike.
In the months prior to the present struggle at Telus, the federal
government offered to provide a mediator to resolve the contract
dispute, a proposal which the TWU leadership welcomed and which
Telus management rejected. The TWU leaders have also made much
of a Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) ruling that Telus
has failed to bargain in good faith with the workers. Predictably,
the ruling did not include any punitive sanctions.
Since the walkout began, the extent of the union leaderships
efforts to widen the struggle has been a radio campaign asking
Telus customers to cancel their extended phone features, i.e.
to avoid hurting the company too much. In the words
of TWU vice-president Peter Massy, Telus is out of line
and out of control. This company needs to be reined in by the
consumers and law-makers of this country.
Massys words encapsulate the dead-end into which the
limited, nationalist perspective of trade unionism has brought
workers. Faced with an all-out assault on his members jobs,
the most the latter-day trade union bureaucrat can do is to issue
timid appeals to consumers and to the supposedly enlightened politicians
of the big business Liberal Party.
In every country and in every sector of production, the defence
of the jobs, wages, pensions and working conditions of workers
requires a new strategy based on an international socialist program.
Instead of subordinating their demands to the requirements of
the market and the profit demands of this or that section of big
business, workers must combine militant industrial action with
a political struggle aimed at bringing to power a workers
government so that economic life can be radically reorganized
to meet the needs of the working class and society at large. Vital
industries such as telecommunications should be placed under public
ownership and subject to the democratic control of the international
working class.
See Also:
British Columbia:
Rank-and-file outrage at betrayal of hospital workers struggle
[12 May 2004]
Canada: State assault
on public sector workers
[30 April 2004]
Canada: Lessons of
the Vidéotron strike
[31 May 2003]
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