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Union orders Toronto city workers to end strike
By a correspondent
11 April 2000
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Toronto city workers have been ordered by their union to end
a 10-day strike and return to work no later than the morning of
Tuesday, April 11. Yet it will be days before the 18,500 workers
learn the details of a proposed contract settlement, let alone
have the opportunity to vote on it. And, the most important issue
in disputethe harmonization of wage rates in the newly-created
mega-cityremains, in all likelihood, unresolved, making
it subject to binding arbitration.
In announcing the strike's end, negotiators for Canadian Union
of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 79 said they had agreed to send
one issue to arbitration, but refused to divulge what that issue
is. Still, in outlining the deal's highlights, CUPE
officials made no mention of wage harmonization and, both before
and during the strike, they repeatedly urged arbitration be used
to resolve the dispute between the city and its inside workers
over equalizing wage rates.
The City, for its part, has no objection, at least in principal,
to inside workers receiving the same pay for doing the same job.
Its concern has been to ensure that wages are not harmonized significantly
upward and that harmonization is phased in, not made retroactive
to the mega-city's January 1998 birth. At present, hourly wage
differentials of $2 and more per hour are common among workers
doing the same job.
The current contract negotiations are the first between Toronto
and its 20,000 inside workers since Ontario's Tory government
forced the amalgamation of the seven municipal administrations
that comprised Metro Toronto into a single municipal government.
Previously, the inside workerswho include clerical staff,
public health nurses, daycare workers, ambulance drivers, building
inspectors, and sewage treatment plant workerswere covered
by 24 different contracts. Now they are subdivided into just four
bargaining units.
Like other public sector workers in Ontario and across Canada,
the inside workers saw their real wages decline significantly
during the 1990s. Most Local 79 members last had a wage increase
eight or more years ago. Thereafter, they were hit by the Ontario
New Democratic Party government's wage-cutting social contract
and then the Tories' public spending cuts, which included major
reductions in provincial grants to municipalities.
The proposed contract will do little, if anything, to redress
the fall in city workers' real wages. Before the strike began,
union negotiators said they would accept the same wage package
given outside workers last fall: a 2 percent pay increase for
1999, 2.17 percent this year, 3.2 percent in 2001, and a $400
signing bonus.
According to the union, the city has given contractual commitments
to provide the 8,000 lower-paid, part-time workers with more hours
and to offer job training to anyone laid off.
Ontario's Tory government rammed through municipal amalgamation
because it provided a means to slash services and sharply reduce
the municipal workforce. CUPE never mounted a serious struggle
to mobilize popular opposition to the municipal restructuring,
nor to tie it to a broader struggle against the assault on social
and public services being carried out by the Ontario Tory and
federal Liberal governments.
CUPE opposed municipal amalgamation from the parochial perspective
of defending the identity of the individual municipalities that
comprised Metro Toronto. It made no attempt to link the municipal
workers' struggle with that of public school teachers or with
school board support staff, most of whom are CUPE members.
In the current dispute, the union all but entirely ignored
the provincial Tory government, while making it clear that CUPE
will not stand in the way of further municipal job and service
cuts. Said CUPE national President Judy Darcy, Local 79
members are not on strike for jobs for life. That's not the issue.
We're not saying jobs for life, but we sure as heck are saying
that if workers are going to have their jobs restructured or be
displaced that they should have the chance to move into another
[municipal] job before hiring people off the street.
Throughout the 10-day strike not only did the 1,500 Local 79
members deemed essential employees, and thus legally
barred from striking, remain on the job; so too, did the 5,400-strong
CUPE Local 416, which represents Toronto's outside workers.
See Also:
Ontario:
The fight against the Harris government
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