URGENT: SHOP STEWARD training registration!

All CUPE 389 Stewards who have not taken Introduction to Stewarding are asked to attend training that has been arranged for you on Oct 19 and 20th at the CUPE National regional office in Burnaby.

You will receive a book off from your regular job and this training is mandatory if you wish to continue as a steward.

Due to COVID, we have not been able to hold training for the past two years. It takes a lot of logistics to organize this training and arrange for the book-offs with the Employers. Office staff have tried to reach several stewards and have received no reply.  Please contact the office as soon as possible if you have not already registered, and if you do not wish to take the training and therefore continue as a steward, we would love to have you stay on as a Communicator, but we need you to let us know so we can keep an accurate list. Unfortunately, if we have anyone not responding, your name will be taken off our list of Shop Stewards.

Thank you,

CUPE 389 Education Committee

150 Years of (Legal) Trade Unionism in Canada

This year, 2022, marks the 150th year anniversary of the Trade Union Act of Canada, when trade unions finally became legal, though trade union leaders would still be subject to arrest and persecution for many years after

by Dan Todd

While a commonly held mistaken view holds modern trade unionism to be a product of Marxism, the earliest modern trade unions predate Marx’s Communist Manifesto (1848) by almost a century, with the first recorded labour strike in the United States by the Philadelphia printers in 1786.

The origins of modern trade unions can be traced back to 18th century Britain, where the rapid expansion of industrial society then taking place drew masses of people, including women, children, peasants and immigrants, into cities. Britain had ended the practice of serfdom in 1574, but vast majority of people remained as tenant-farmers on estates owned by landed aristocracy. This transition was not merely one of relocation from rural to urban environs; rather, the nature of industrial work created a new class: “worker”.

A farmer worked the land, raised animals and grew crop, and either owned the land or paid rent, but ultimately sold a product and had control over his life and work. As industrial workers, however, the workers sold themselves as labour, and took directions from employers, giving up their freedom and self-agency in the service of a master. The critics of the new arrangement would call this “wage slavery,” and the greatest criticism in the U.S.A. came from the Republican party, which called this arrangement “Unchristian.” The term that persisted was a new form of human relations: employment. Unlike farmers, workers were completely dependent on their employers, without job security or a promise of an on-going relationship with their employers, lacking control over the work they performed or how it impacted their health and life. It is in this context, then, that modern trade unions emerged.

Whether it is workers’ rights, working conditions, human rights or social justice, laws get changed if people stand together in solidarity. But laws cannot get changed if one cannot even vote – so the expansion of the franchise was one of the first campaigns the Unions took on.

In April of 1872, unionized printers striking for a 9-hour day were arrested in Toronto and jailed. Their demand was a decrease in their work days to nine hours at a time when some workers were expected to work for as long as 12 hours. The printers paraded with union supporters to Queen’s Park where a crowd of 10,000 strong rallied on their side. The following day, employers, led by Liberal George Brown of the “Globe” Newspaper, had twenty-four strike leaders arrested and charged with criminal conspiracy. Capitalizing on the political folly of Brown’s actions, and the growing public outrage, Conservative Prime Minister Sir John A. MacDonald introduced and enacted the Trade Unions Act, effectively making union membership legal. He further undermined Brown by removing union members from “criminal conspiracy” for taking strike action. This won Macdonald the key support heading into a federal election.

In Ottawa, union members marched to the Prime Minister’s home in celebration of the move and paraded him through the streets by torch light. It is worth noting that as it gave workers the right to join a union, Macdonald’s government simultaneously passed another act that made picketing illegal. In the years following this “first”, unions came to realize that governments could take away rights as easily as they could be bestowed. Legal strikes, even the freedom to hold union meetings, were declared criminal acts as governments saw fit. Today, the right to belong to a union as well as the right to strike are protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, as fundamental rights, following the Supreme Court of Canada’s Decisions in 2014.

Canada’s unions won these rights after years of struggle, political battles and even physical violence. The federal Conservative government of Sir John Sparrow Thompson implemented the first Labour Day as a national holiday in response to pressure from working people to celebrate a day acknowledging workers’ rights. However, working people still had a long way to go in gaining what most of us would consider fundamental rights – OHS, 8hr work-day, the Weekend, etc. Historian Joanna Dawson writes in an August 31, 2011 article in Canada’s History entitled “The First Labour Day”: “The workers still did not obtain their immediate goals of a shorter work week. In fact, many still lost their job. They did, however, discover how to regain the power they lost in the industrialized economy. Their strike proved that workers could gain the attention of their employers, the public, and most importantly, their political leaders, if they worked together. The “Nine-Hour Movement,” as it became known, spread to other Canadian cities and a shorter work week became the primary demand of union workers in the years following the Toronto strike.”

The 1872 workers’ parade in Toronto was a catalyst for similar parades in different cities across Canada that championed the rights and issues of workers. Unions marched in those parades identified by their colourful banners. By the time that 1894 rolled around, the Canadian government got the message that such official acknowledgement was needed and passed legislation on July 23, 1894 that made Labour Day a national holiday in September. According to the Elections Canada website, even the expansion of the right to vote to include non-property owning men (1897), and then women (1916), was a result of direct activism and work of the Canadian Trade Unions.

From the right to vote, to the recently expanded Canada Pensions Plan Act improvements, Canadian trade unions have made Canada better for everyone. Let us then mark the 150 year anniversary by showing gratitude for all we have achieved, on every side of the political divide, and regardless of what we do, and committing ourselves to an even better next 150 years for Canada, and for the world.

(Portions of Article were taken directly from: Canadian Labour Congress Website and from the Toronto Public Library Blog post titled “Remembering the First Labour Day in Toronto: September 3: Snapshots in History” by John P.)

Urgent: Hiring Custodians for the North Vancouver School District!

School District #44: North Vancouver has many positions available for Custodial staff at its many elementary and secondary schools! 

Most of the positions have casual hours leading to full-time employment for those who wish to become full-time, or, those who wish to retain the flexibility of working casual hours as a part-time job can benefit from additional income and flexibility!

The current pay is $23.93 + 14% in lieu of benefits, or $27.28/hr (2021 rate).  The new negotiated rate that will be implemented is $25.00/hr + 14% in lieu or $28.50/hr. 

If you or someone you know is looking for a good job with fair pay with flexibility or opportunity to become full-time in a short period, please apply!  The Building Service Worker certification is considered an asset, but IS NOT REQUIRED AT THIS TIME, and candidates will be provided with on-job orientation, though experience in similar work is an asset.

Presidents Council endorses Provincial Framework Agreement

The K-12 Presidents are endorsing the new Provincial Framework Agreement reached last week. The British Columbia Public School Employers’ Association (BCPSEA) also endorses the agreement. Both recommend the agreement be part of local collective agreements.

The Provincial Framework Agreement (PFA) has a 3-year term in effect from July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2025. It includes general wage increases in each year.

  • July 1, 2022: $0.25 per hour wage increaseplus an additional 3.24%
  • July 1, 2023: 5.5% increase, and up to 1.25%cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). For clarity,the general wage increase will be atminimum 5.5%, to a maximum of 6.75%
  • July 1, 2024: 2% increase, and up to a 1%COLA. For clarity, the general wage increasewill be at minimum 2%, to a maximum of 3%
    COLA is according to the BC consumer price index annual average.

The PFA also includes provincial government funding for local bargaining to address local issues. It’s based on full-time enrolled students in districts, with a minimum amount.

  • 2022/2023: $11.5 million allocated to schooldistricts, with a $40,000 minimum
  • 2023/2024: $13.8 million allocated, with a$50,000 minimum
  • 2024/2025: $17.8 million allocated, with a$60,000 minimum

In local bargaining, K-12 locals and school districts will negotiate how to use these funds. The only thing they can’t go towards are general wage increase.

Other highlights of the framework agreement include:

Education

$50,000 per year in 2022 and 2023 for support staff education, with an another $1 million per year beginning in 2024. The joint Support Staff Education Committee (SSEC) will decide on allocating this money.

Workplace violence prevention

A new Provincial Joint Health and Safety Taskforce. Its mandate includes supporting measures to address workplace violence prevention.

Benefits

$3 million in annual funding for potential benefit enhancements. Also, $1 million in one-time funding for addictions treatment support programs.

LIF

In addition to the PFA, the Ministry of Education will be increasing the Learning Improvement Fund to $25 million for the 2023/2024 and 2024/2025 school years. This will allow for more Education Assistant hours across the province.

The K-12 Presidents Council recommends the framework agreement for local bargaining proposals. PFA provisions come into effect when part of a ratified local collective agreement, with general wage increases retroactive to July 1, 2022. It is local collective agreements that members of K-12 locals approve and ratify. Local bargaining needs to completed and ratified byJanuary 25, 2023. The complete Provincial Framework Agreement is available on at bcschools.cupe.ca. Please direct questions on the PFA and local bargaining to your local executive.

School support workers reach tentative deal with BC public schools

Burnaby – A tentative provincial framework agreement has been reached between the unions representing B.C.’s 40,000 school support workers and the British Columbia Public School Employers’ Association (BCPSEA).

“Our bargaining committees worked hard to reach this tentative agreement,” says Paul Simpson, president of the K-12 Presidents Council. “Working together, we were able to reach an agreement that recognizes the vital role our members have in providing this province’s students the highest quality of education in healthy schools.”

Further details on the tentative agreement will not be made public until presented to K 12 school support members. Once endorsed by the K 12 Presidents Council, the 3-year provincial framework agreement (PFA) will form the provincial agreement portion of proposals that will go forward in local bargaining between local unions and their respective school districts.

The K-12 Presidents Council represents locals in school districts across British Columbia. These locals represent approximately 40,000 school support workers including: education assistants, school secretaries, custodians/caretakers, Indigenous support workers, child/youth/family support workers, IT workers, library technicians, Strong Start facilitators & early childhood educators, trades & maintenance workers, and bus drivers.

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For more information:

Greg Taylor
CUPE National Communications Representative
604 842-7444

 

From https://www.cupe.bc.ca/2022/09/16/school-support-workers-reach-tentative-deal-with-bc-public-schools/

 

 

Bargaining News: Average Hourly Wages Index, up by 5.4% since last year

Statistics Canada reports that the average hourly wages index has increased on a 12-month rolling averaged basis since August 2021 to August 2022 by 5.4%.  That means wages in Canada have gone up by an average of 5.4%.

Your bargaining committees and negotiators are keeping track of developments like this in order to achieve the best possible outcomes at the negotiating table.  As a member, steward or ally, we ask that you support the Union, contact us if you have questions, and kindly refrain from making derogatory or negative comments that harm our solidarity or common aims.  Come back often to this page for updates.

CUPE Local 389 is entering negotiations for all our collective agreements, beginning with the District of North Vancouver.  District members are asked to support your bargaining committee, which is comprised of Tony Volpe, Kolton Smith, Sec-Treas Brian Warman, President Yvette Mercier, and staff representative Dan Todd.

Labour Force Survey, August 2022

Released at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time in The Daily, Friday, September 9, 2022

Employment declined by 40,000 (-0.2%) in August, and the unemployment rate rose by 0.5 percentage points to 5.4%.

Employment fell among youth aged 15 to 24 in August, primarily young women, as well as among people aged 55 to 64.

Employment gains in various industries, including “other services” and professional, scientific, and technical services, were more than offset by declines in educational services and construction.

There were fewer public-sector employees in August, while the number of employees in the private sector and the number of self-employed workers held steady.

Employment fell in British Columbia, Manitoba, and Nova Scotia, while it increased in Quebec. There was little change in the other provinces.

Total hours worked were unchanged in August, following a decline in July (-0.5%). On a year-over-year basis, total hours worked were up 3.7%.

The average hourly wages of employees rose 5.4% (+$1.60 to $31.33) on a year-over-year basis in August, compared with 5.2% in both June and July (not seasonally adjusted).

In August, more than 1 in 10 (11.9%) permanent employees were planning to leave their job within the next 12 months, 5.5 percentage points higher than in January 2022 (not seasonally adjusted).

There were 307,000 Canadians in August who had left their job in order to retire at some point in the last year, up from 233,000 one year earlier and from 273,000 in August 2019 (not seasonally adjusted).

The unemployment rate for immigrants who had arrived in Canada within the past five years was lower in August 2022 (7.6%) than in any month of August since comparable data became available in 2006 (three-month moving average, not seasonally adjusted).

END