02) BACK TO WORK LAW
HITS YORK U TEACHERS
(The
following
article is from the February 1-14, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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PV Ontario Bureau
Seven months after ordering striking
TTC workers back to work, the Ontario Liberals introduced similar
legislation on Jan. 25. This time the target is striking members of
CUPE Local 3903, mostly contract teachers and workers at York
University, fighting for job security in a workplace where all are
obliged to re-apply for their jobs annually.
Some have
worked as long as 15
or 20 years at York, never knowing from one year to the next whether
the University will rehire them, or to teach one course or five.
Members of Local 3903 teach most of the courses at York, but their
wages are a fraction of the university budget. Many of these low paid
contract workers are also post-graduate students, facing high tuition
fees.
Because the
conditions at York
are similar for contract teachers at most Canadian universities, their
struggle will set the stage for negotiations and settlements across the
board. This is no doubt why York's right-wing administration has
refused to negotiate, effectively locking out its employees, and
waiting for provincial legislation.
Ontario
Communist Party leader
Liz Rowley charges the government with collusion, since provincial
under-funding of universities is at the root of the problem. "Ontario's
universities receive the lowest funding of all ten provinces, and none
of them are well-funded," she says. Furthermore, "binding arbitration
which will follow the back to work order requires the arbitrator to
take into account the employer's ability to pay in making an award.
This will ensure that the workers will be the losers. That's not free
collective bargaining. It's union-busting."
While
marching to Queen's Park
after a Jan. 27 rally at the Ministry of Labour, strikers were attacked
by Toronto police. Four were arrested and charged with assaulting
police. Office workers in the towers overlooking University Avenue in
downtown Toronto rushed out to tell media that they had seen the police
attack the strikers, not the other way around. Video of the attacks was
also given to union leaders and their lawyers.
CUPE Ontario
President Sid Ryan
said the union will challenging the back to work legislation. "There is
no deadlock", he said, stating the union has been waiting to negotiate
a collective agreement for 83 days, while the employer has refused to
negotiate for weeks at a time. A forced vote on York's final offer was
soundly rejected in mid-January, after which the employer flatly told
the mediator they would refuse to meet the union for further
negotiations.
A successful
challenge to the
legislation would make it easier for unions like the Elementary
Teachers and the Ontario Public Service Employees Union which are, or
will be in difficult negotiations with the provincial government this
year.
The Ontario
NDP has opposed the
back to work legislation, delaying passage of the Bill, extracting a
promise from the Premier that he would pressure York President Shoukri
to send York negotiators back to the bargaining table.
The Tories
meanwhile are
hysterical, attacking everyone for being "in bed" with the unions and
casting themselves as protectors of 50,000 York students.
With the
forces inside the
Legislature so stacked against labour, the Communist Party is calling
on the labour and democratic movements to gird for a major battle to
defend basic labour and democratic rights.
"It can't be
fixed in the
Legislature," said Rowley, "it will need the power of a mighty people's
coalition to stop the economic and political bulldozer that's coming
this way. Quality of life is about to be flattened across the province
and across the country. We need a coordinated fightback led by
labour,
and we need it now."