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Archive for May, 2010

Nickel miner Vale Inco confirms labour talks have broken down

May 7th, 2010

TORONTO – Nickel miner Vale Inco has confirmed that mediated contract talks with its striking workers are over and that no new talks are in the works.

With failure to reach an agreement, a 10-month-old strike by more than 3,000 workers in Sudbury and Port Colborne, Ont., will continue.

Members of the United Steelworkers union hit the picket lines over a number of issues including pensions, a nickel price bonus, seniority transfer rights and contracting out.

Vale Inco says those issues were discussed during the most recent round of talks with a mediator.

More than 200 Steelworkers in Voisey’s Bay, N.L., have been on strike since Aug. 1 over similar issues.

It was the second time negotiators have met to bargain since the strike began — 10 days of negotiations in early March failed to end the impasse and led to a rejection of Vale Inco’s offer of settlement.

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Workers protest ‘fake’ green initiatives at Toronto hotels

May 5th, 2010

Room attendants at Sheraton say hotel’s initiatives don’t help environment, only cut jobs

New green initiative being touted as environmentally friendly at three Toronto hotels are bogus, and do little to “conserve natural resources” as the hotels claim, according to hotel workers.

Instead, the “Make a Green Choice” program being offered at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, and the “Green Stay” programs at the Delta Chelsea and Delta East hotels merely give the hotels a way to save money by reducing cleaning staff.

“From our perspective, these programs are doing virtually nothing for the environment,” said Brigida Ruiz, who works as a room attendant at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel. “Instead, what they are really intended do is greatly reduce the number of room attendants employed by the hotel each day,” she said.

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No end in sight for stalemate between workers, company

May 3rd, 2010

614 days.

On a makeshift wooden sign affixed to a post, striking workers at Engineered Coated Products keep a tally of the number of days they’ve been off the job.

For 20 months, the workers, initially about 80 and now an estimated 60, have been camped outside the Elgin Street company as busloads of replacement workers are brought in daily to keep the packaging plant operational.
There has been no negotiation between the workers, represented by the United Steelworkers union, and the company since last July when the two sides met with a government conciliator.

And it seems unlikely they will be talking any time soon.

“It takes a toll,” admitted Rick Willson, a 33-year employee at ECP. “There’s nobody here to help.”

The strike began on Aug. 23, 2008 when Saul Marques, secretary- treasurer for United Steelworkers, Local 1-500, said the company demanded workers take a 25% wage cut, along with a cut in benefits and changes to their pension plan. The company, said Marques, also wanted to implement “continental” 12-hour shifts that would have resulted in job losses.

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Canadian Nickel Strikers Rally for Renew Anti-Scab Law in Ontario Province

May 3rd, 2010

The month of May has been designated by United Steelworkers Local 6500 in Canada as “anti-scab” month, a reference to the strikebreakers that the Brazilian mining company Vale is using in efforts to break a ten-month strike in the provinces of Ontario and Labrador/Newfoundland.

Some 200 steelworkers and other supporters rallied in Queen’s Park, Toronto, on 29 April to support introduction of legislation in the Ontario Parliament that would outlaw the use of striker replacements during economic strikes or lockouts. Many of the steelworkers arrived after long bus rides from Sudbury, Ontario, where they experience first-hand the family hardships and community strife brought on by the bargaining intransigence of a company content to use scabs to regain partial production.

On 29 April, the Private Member’s Bill that again would prohibit companies operating in Ontario from using scabs passed a first reading in Parliament by a 32-3 vote. The bill was introduced by New Democratic Party legislators France Gelinas and Peter Kormos.

Somewhat surprisingly, 21 members of the ruling Liberal Party joined with eight New Democrats and three Progressive Conservatives to pass this first reading. The bill must proceed through two more hearings before becoming law, and that could happen by year’s end. In Canada, most labour code is enacted at the provincial level.

Quebec and British Colombia are currently the only two provinces that prohibit the use of replacement workers during strikes or lockouts. In Ontario, such a prohibition was on the books from 1992 to 1995, but was repealed in 1995 when Liberals took control of the Parliament. Gelinas presented proof that legislation banning companies from using replacement workers leads to shorter strikes, less volatile picket-line scenes, less family and community stress, and overall, better labour-management relations.

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No end in sight for stalemate between workers, company

May 3rd, 2010

614 days.

On a makeshift wooden sign affixed to a post, striking workers at Engineered Coated Products keep a tally of the number of days they’ve been off the job.

For 20 months, the workers, initially about 80 and now an estimated 60, have been camped outside the Elgin Street company as busloads of replacement workers are brought in daily to keep the packaging plant operational.

There has been no negotiation between the workers, represented by the United Steelworkers union, and the company since last July when the two sides met with a government conciliator.

And it seems unlikely they will be talking any time soon.

“It takes a toll,” admitted Rick Willson, a 33-year employee at ECP. “There’s nobody here to help.”

The strike began on Aug. 23, 2008 when Saul Marques, secretary- treasurer for United Steelworkers, Local 1-500, said the company demanded workers take a 25% wage cut, along with a cut in benefits and changes to their pension plan. The company, said Marques, also wanted to implement “continental” 12-hour shifts that would have resulted in job losses.

The workers, who earn between $17 and $23 an hour, had offered to take a 12% pay cut and other concessions in a three-year deal.

“The company wants us to agree to a 25% wage decrease or they won’t even talk,” said Marques. “It’s blackmail. Collective bargaining is supposed to be an exchange of facts. They’ve never provided us with any information.

“It’s been long enough. It’s time for the company to tell us their intent.”

ECP is part of the Intertape Polymer Group, which operates 10 plants in North America. The company bought the Brantford plant several years ago.

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