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Posts Tagged ‘United Steelworkers’

Uranium mine workers back strike

October 5th, 2010

Workers at two uranium mines in northern Saskatchewan have voted in favour of strike action.

United Steelworkers members at Cameco’s Key Lake and McArthur Lake mines voted 97 per cent in favour of a strike. Their last collective agreement expired Dec. 31, 2009.

The strike vote was conducted during the last two weeks and the results were tallied Sunday.

“This is a very strong mandate for our negotiating position,” said union spokesperson Randy Gatzka. “It should send a strong message to the company that they need to put a serious offer on the table.”

Gatzka said the union hopes to come to an agreement with Cameco without having to strike. Retiree benefits have been one sticking point in negotiations, he said.

Cameco spokesperson Rob Gereghty wouldn’t comment on specifics of the negotiations, but said the company is ready to meet with the union.

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Break taken in Voisey’s Bay strike talks

September 27th, 2010

Both sides in a long-running strike at Voisey’s Bay Nickel’s mine in northern Labrador have adjourned talks for a week.

Independent mediator Bill Wells has been working with mining giant Vale and the United Steelworkers union to resolve a strike that started in August 2009.

Neither side is commenting on whether anything has been accomplished since Wells entered the talks earlier this month.

The Newfoundland and Labrador government hired Wells to help break an impasse that has kept the two sides apart, even after a similar Vale strike in Ontario ended after one year on the picket lines.

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ONA supports striking Steelworkers at Vale Inco in Voisey’s Bay

September 24th, 2010

The Ontario Nurses’ Association (ONA) is renewing its support for United Steelworkers (USW) on the Vale Inco picket line in Voisey’s Bay, Labrador with a donation of $3,000 to the USW District 6 strike fund.

This strike is about to enter its 15th month and is now the longest-ever labour dispute in the history of the mining operations in Canada that were previously owned by Inco.

Until July, when the Brazil-based mining corporation finally settled with its employees in Port Colborne and Sudbury, Ontario, 3,000 USW members had been on strike for nearly a year because they refused to accept deep concessions.

“Just last week nurses united with workers from across Ontario to block scabs from entering an Engineered Coated Products plant in Brantford where United Steelworkers members have been fighting for good jobs for two years,” said ONA President Linda Haslam-Stroud, RN. “Our three-day blockade was successful at forcing that employer back to the bargaining table.”

“There’s no good reason that workers anywhere should have to go without work for so long just to maintain the middle-class standards that their parents and grandparents achieved,” said Haslam-Stroud. “Registered nurses in Ontario call on Vale Inco to start negotiating a fair deal with its employees in Voisey’s Bay today.”

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Steelworkers to visit OPSEU strikers on picket line

September 14th, 2010

Members of the United Steelworkers union will visit striking OPSEU Local 677 members on their picket line at the entrance to Laurentian University Sept. 14, starting at 7 a.m.

The Steelworkers will cook a breakfast for the strikers, and then walk the picket lines with them.

Local 677 represents clerical, administrative and technical workers at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM). They have been on strike since Aug. 16.

The parties have agreed to return to the table Sept. 14-17 in Thunder Bay with the assistance of a Ministry of Labour mediator. Mediated talks earlier this month ended without an agreement.

Steelworkers Local 6500 members settled a strike against Vale earlier this summer, after being on strike for nearly a year.

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Two sides will resume talks today

September 3rd, 2010

As workers at the Delta Brunswick hotel and Brunswick Square shopping complex head into their seventh day on strike, Fortis Properties and United Steelworkers Local 1-306 will return to the bargaining table today.

Lawrence McKay, Atlantic co-ordinator of United Steelworkers, the union representing the workers, said the two sides will resume talks today at 9:30 a.m. with a mediator at the Hampton Inn.

About 100 workers who work in the hotel’s housekeeping and food and beverage services, as well as parking attendants and maintenance workers serving both the hotel and the mall, have been on strike since Saturday. The workers’ contract with Fortis Properties, which owns Brunswick Square. expired on June 30.

The fact the two sides are going back to the table is a good sign, McKay added, and he’s hopeful they will reach an agreement.

After today’s negotiations, regardless of whether an agreement is reached, the union will meet with the workers to give them an update, McKay said.

Gail Tucker, manager of corporate communications for Fortis Properties, said the company has decided not to make any further comments about the strike.

“We continue to monitor the situation and at this point it remains the same,” Tucker said.

“There are some things scheduled but we don’t want to get into talking about those details publicly.”

Tucker did confirm the hotel and complex are still operating normally and management at the hotel continues to fill the roles of the workers who are off the job.

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The Class Struggle in Vaughan: The Sears Lockout and USW

August 29th, 2010

In the last week of July 2010, workers of United Steelworkers (USW) Local 9537, who have been locked out of their workplace and on the picket-lines for nearly five months, found a big pile of shit sitting right smack-dab by their picket-line outside of a warehouse in Vaughan, just north of Toronto.[1] One could not ask for a better symbol of retail-capital’s attitude toward their workers. Workers at this supply warehouse have been locked-out since April Fool’s Day after rejecting a concessionary offer. They have been fighting an uphill battle against a nefarious employer who has not shrunk from hiring scabs and pitting the warehouse workers against the retail workers. The workers have consistently held the line; they defeated a government-forced ratification vote on May 28, and continue to show anger at their employer. Sears, not unexpectedly has continued to ‘wait it out’ (following the lead of the year long battle between Vale-Inco and USW in Sudbury) predicting that that sooner or later the energy of an isolated union local will dissipate. And the workers will be forced to come back to work with an offer not quite as concessionary, but certainly not a victory.

What is the symbolic value of shit when Sears has already hired 500 scabs ‘to replace’ the locked-out workers? A Sears representative acknowledged to Toronto Sun columnist Joe Warmington that they had dumped the crap on the line but claimed it was part of regular lawn maintenance. Striking a collegial pose, USW staff representative Terry Bea maintained that the union wasn’t accusing Sears, merely claimed that something odd was going on. But Sears worker Paul Taylor spoke more angrily and bluntly: the picketers believe that the dumping was the work of a “strike breaker from Tennessee.” This episode for Sears workers captures the central issue that is facing the Canadian labour movement: how long will the labour movement continue to take shit from an aggressive union-busting employer before fighting back?

Sears Workers, USW and Unionism

Sears Canada and Local 9537 had been in bargaining through the early months of 2010. Like in the case of Vale-Inco bargaining with USW, Sears was demanding the type of concessions that even the most conservative business unions wouldn’t accept: rollbacks to pensions, health care and other benefits, vacation days and so forth. According to USW’s external communications, the sticking point making the offer unacceptable was that the contract would stipulate with regards to benefits that they would be “as per the company policy.” Such language would give management control to set and alter benefits on their own as ‘company policy.’ This would, in all likelihood, force the benefits of the unionized warehouse workers down to the level of non-union Sears workers.

Such contractual language would defeat the very purpose of a union. The implication here is that unionized workers would lose out on the improvements to their contracts, not simply monetary gains in wages, since unionizing little over two years (in January 2008) before the round of bargaining. The union rejected the concessionary offer, although it signaled a willingness to continue bargaining. Sears, in contrast, abruptly walked away from the bargaining table on March 23, 2010, and locked-out its workers on the first of April, and continue to avoid bargaining. Why would Sears – or any firm – be so brazen with their union?

Three reasons present themselves: Sears’ desire to remain non-union; the availability of strikebreakers; and their calculation that there would be limited resistance from USW, particularly in light of how USW was stumbling through the major strike at Vale-Inco, and the wider labour movement was all but invisible in its support.

First, Sears Canada has a record of opposing unionization. Sears warehouses are basically unorganized, by USW or any other union. Winning democratic collective bargaining rights can only be seen as a victory, in any component of the distribution network connected to the retail sector. Unionization was proving especially beneficial in reversing the ratio of full time to part-time workers, with part-timers moving into full time work. Those who remained part-time were also entitled to bargaining unit representation. In a moving video interview for Basics News service, a Caribbean-Canadian worker, Michael Smith, speaks with enthusiasm about how much better life is with the union, and using the union’s slogan “we’ll be out one day longer than them.”[2] As Smith points out, this is a precedent that Sears fears. With only 500 of its 30,000 workers unionized, a successful fightback will send a message to the other workers that sticking with the union is a good idea.

Second, it seems clear that Sears assumed that in a lockout they would be able to find scabs to come in to do the work of the locked-out workers. In the midst of a recession and rising unemployment, in an area of Greater Toronto with high migration, a very fluid labour force searching for work and no tradition of unions, Sears clearly determined that if it decided to use strikebreakers, there would be a pool of labour willing to take the work up. In an isolated suburb of Toronto, there was also very little danger that the wider labour movement would organize themselves to block scabs from getting in. The locked-out workers would be on their own, and it was easy enough to work out the logistics of getting them in and out, with nothing in the way of community reprisals to worry about. Indeed, like Vale-Inco, Sears Canada is using AFI International Group, “North America’s leader in crisis management and response,” which is essentially a strike-breaking and scab-firm, to ensure that scabs can get to the workplace. Even in Sudbury, the USW discouraged reprisals against scabs. One can imagine the same messaging is occurring in Vaughan.

Third, when looked at from the perspective of an aggressive employer, it would be easy to make an assessment that in the current period USW has a decidedly mixed record when it comes to successful fightbacks. It is unclear, for instance, how well this new local is being supported and how well the new union members are being educated on union issues and, indeed, even on the lockout. One locked-out worker interviewed by me stated that he was better informed by management than the union. This was even to the point of hearing about the lockout and contract details from management. Yet, this worker was clear that life improved at Sears when the union came in. He said many found the culture of the union very distant, repeatedly mentioning distance between the rank and file and the stewards, even implying that there was more distance between workers and stewards, often off for training sessions, than between workers and management. While understanding of the union and its purposes, this worker feels in the dark about his own union’s demands, tactics and strategy. On the other hand, he feels informed by management, which sends regular “official” information to the workers. Sounding a note of dismay, he said that he felt the lockout could go on for another couple of months, “like Sudbury.”

Observing the fallout of the Vale-Inco strike in Sudbury, the academic and queer activist Gary Kinsman warned of the Steelworkers as too much acting like a “business union.” This was specifically in reference to USW 6500 (and one could also point to the problems that driving instructors of USW 9511 found themselves in, with also an unclear strategy to widen the strike effort and keep members informed). It seems that the description that Scott Neigh applied to USW 6500 might well apply to USW 9537 – “an internal culture that has not always fostered participatory governance or spaces and resources devoted to facilitating social movement-like mobilization of rank-and-file workers.” In Vaughan, as in Sudbury, there is no strategy to politicize the lockout more broadly, draw out community and labour movement support, in the hope that conventional collective bargaining by a few leaders will be enough to defeat an aggressive employer today.

This is not at all to say that the USW’s record is completely bleak. USW Local 1005 at Stelco in Hamilton did a fine job in helping the workers resist concessions and layoffs via developing a more participatory union structure. Through broad community and labour support, they were able to go so far as to ensure that Stelco and U.S. Steel not only got mud in their face, but actually was found to be legally fraudulent. The struggle was waged with broad community support, and was framed not merely as an economic struggle, but a political struggle that united communities across Hamilton. The experiences of the workers of USW 9537, however, are quite different from the Stelco workers.

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Vale’s Tactics Won’t Work: USW

August 24th, 2010

A spokesman for the United Steelworkers Union says he’s not surprised by Vale print ads criticising the union’s role in the Voisey’s Bay strike. The ad outlines several financial proposals, and says the union doesn’t understand the math involved. But Boyd Bussey says one of the company’s tactics since the beginning of negotiations has been to misrepresent the facts instead of returning to the bargaining table. He says his math is dead on, and Vale’s math is wrong. He says the company needs to give up this kind of tactic. He says it’s intimidation, and everytime the union makes statements in the press, Vale charges the union. He says they are making the union spend its money and are trying to bust it, instead of coming to the table and negotiating a fair deal.

The strike has been ongoing for more than a year, and Bussey says there is no end in sight. He says he’s asked Danny Williams to get involved. He says Williams is supposed to be looking at alternatives and getting back to the union. He says to this date, the company has not shown any interest in returning to the bargaining table.

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Defamation suit filed against Voisey’s union boss

August 24th, 2010

A long-running labour dispute at the Voisey’s Bay nickel mine in northern Labrador has spilled over into the courts.

Darren Cove, president of the United Steelworkers local at Voisey’s Bay, said he was served Monday with documents in a civil lawsuit.

Cove said a statement of claim filed by Vale alleges that Cove defamed the company when he recently said it was treating its workers like second-class citizens.

About 200 Steelworkers members in Labrador have been off the job since early August in 2009, in a strike over wages and benefits.

Cove said lawyers for the Steelworkers have told him they have never before seen an employer use such a tactic in a labour dispute.

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Tension still high: union

August 21st, 2010

Representatives for United Steelworkers and Vale Ltd. met Friday to discuss the union’s complaint that contractors are doing work that 18 laid-off Steelworkers could be doing.

USW staff representative Myles Sullivan said the parties are trying to reach a resolution about the use of contractors as operations at the nickel company begin to return to normal after an almost year-long strike.

About 2,700 members of USW Local 6500 are back to work six weeks after they approved a new five-year collective agreement with the nickel company based in Brazil.

Vale spokeswoman Angie Robson said all employees except the 18 workers laid off are back on the job and all of Vale’s Sudbury plants are on their way to ramping up to full production.

Both furnaces have been fired up at the Copper Cliff Smelter Complex, and Vale is predicting it will return to full production in Sudbury by the end of September.

But Sullivan said life has not returned to normal for his 18 members who were told just after the strike ended that they no longer had jobs.

Tensions are also running high in many workplaces as Steelworkers off the job for more than a year, in some instances, reclaim their places in the company.

Sullivan said a “high volume” of grievances has been filed by the union on behalf of members in the six weeks since the new contract was accepted and Steelworkers began returning to work.

Under the terms of the return-to-work protocol signed by the two sides, Vale had six weeks to call Steelworkers back to their jobs.

Grievances have been filed relating to a number of issues, said Sullivan — such as discipline, hours of work, shift schedules and paid lunches.

In some cases, union members have complained that personal belongings such as tools and gear was missing when they returned to their operations.

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Workers at the Endako Mines operation join the United Steelworkers

July 22nd, 2010

BURNABY, B.C. – The United Steelworkers said Thursday that some 260 workers at the Endako Mines open pit and milling operations in northern B.C. have officially joined the union.

The mine, which is owned by Thompson Creek Metals Co. Inc. (TSX:TCM), produces molybdenum, which is used in the manufacture of metal alloys and stainless steel.

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