hitmouse
so defeated, thinks it's funny
Has anyone seen much discussion of this? It sounds like a wild story - the Ontario government passed a law banning a strike, the workers and their union told them to fuck off and went out anyway, and the government immediately bottled it and withdrew the law:
Education workers at Ontario's legislature erupted into cheers and applause on Monday as Doug Ford's Progressive Conservative government repealed a law that had imposed a contract on them and banned them from striking.
Lawmakers voted unanimously to repeal Bill 28, taking just 20 minutes to have the legislation "deemed for all purposes never to have been in force."
The province had passed the legislation on Nov. 3 in a bid to prevent 55,000 workers from the Canadian Union of Public Employees from striking.
But thousands of workers, including education assistants, librarians and custodians, walked off the job anyway, shutting many schools across the province to in-person learning for two days.
Last week, Premier Doug Ford offered to withdraw the legislation if CUPE members returned to work, which they did.
CUPE members declared victory on Monday.
"I feel vindicated," said Laura Walton, president of CUPE's Ontario School Board Council of Unions.
"I think for education workers, this was a fight, this was a fight for the province of Ontario, and I really hope it serves a message: you cannot strip the rights of workers away."
The government's law, which used the notwithstanding clause to guard against constitutional challenges, had set fines for violating the legislation at a maximum of $4,000 per employee per day and up to $500,000 per day for the union.
CUPE, government still 'far apart,' union says
The two sides returned to the bargaining table last Tuesday.
In a news conference Monday, Walton noted the two sides are still "far apart" in negotiations.
Education Minister Stephen Lecce wasn't in the legislature when the government repealed the bill. Earlier in question period, Lecce said the government is going to stay at the table to get a deal done that "keeps kids in the classroom."
"That is our commitment," he said. "It's what we're guided by, it's what the people of Ontario sent us here to do."
The government originally offered raises of two per cent a year for workers making less than $40,000 and 1.25 per cent for all others, but the four-year deal imposed by Bill 28 would give 2.5 per cent annual raises to workers making less than $43,000 and 1.5 per cent raises for all others.
It sounds like in terms of the areas they organise, CUPE are a bit like a Canadian equivalent to Unison, but I can't quite imagine Unison just wrecking an anti-strike law like that?The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) has filed another strike notice, leaving education workers poised to walk off the job again in Ontario, according to both the province's minister of education and the union.
In a statement Wednesday morning, Stephen Lecce said since talks resumed a few days ago, the province has put forward multiple offers that would add "hundreds of millions of dollars across the sector, especially for lower income workers," but CUPE has thus far rejected them.
"I think it is entirely unfair to children. It's unnecessary," Lecce said, speaking with reporters at Queen's Park. "We should be having these discussions at the table, to get a deal both for members and for our kids. And I think we are all disappointed that this is the path the union has taken.
"But this government will stay resolved and stay focused at the table to get a deal, especially knowing that we've offered a better option with more money — a significant increase, hundreds of millions of dollars more for lower-paid workers."
In a statement issued Wednesday morning, CUPE said education workers have given notice of a potential province-wide strike — which could start in five days time.