I believe the government moved maybe .5-1% maybe just for lowest earners, Begged them not to strike and to keep talking and warned that he would use legislation, they voted to strike, legislation was put in place (more heavy handed then necessary) the union offered to drop to 6% and not strike, government said to come back and negotiate if they want to negotiate, union went on strike, government said if they stop striking then legislation can be removed and they can go back to talking.Not a good way to negotiate for sure. Did the government have a counter at that point or just refusing to even talk about the crazy ask in the beginning?
Having contracts expire anytime during the summer recess will never happen -- unions are dead set against that for obvious reasons.yes, there was negotiating going on...trouble is, dates are few and far between...we received a list of dates from my union and in my opinion, they are so spread out that it's no wonder they don't get anything accomplished...it's a total farce if you ask me...what I think needs to happen is they two sides site down, every day, for as long as it takes to hash out a new contract/agreement, not this one day here, another next week, a few more in a few weeks mumbo jumbo that they currently do...and I agree, contracts shouldn't end on August 31, they should end on the last day of school...and if you want to keep the end dates to August 31, then both parties should have to start negotiations in the summer...just my two cents worth...
Not saying the government is not part of the problem here, I do think coming with a crazy high price and expecting to get that and not budge is a little different then the government going in low and saying they won't budge. If I came in and said I want a 12% raise, and the employer says most we will give is 2% I would think my next step would be to try and find that middle group saying ok how about 7% and try and push things on that way.The mediator sent both sides home because they weren't making any progress...both CUPE and the government dug their heels in...
Job security irks me. The world is in flux. Things change. Neighbourhoods grow, age out and shrink. Immigration changes the type of teaching but also restores growth. Emails have replaced the daily mail. WFH and Learn from home.Each party picks their starting point. Not every issue would land at 50%. If one side prioritized salary and the other side prioritized job security you could end up with minimal salary increase but much stronger job security for instance.
I agree, that was just an example of things that unions have fought hard for in the past. Having any employee invincible by contract is bad for other employees and the business.Job security irks me. The world is in flux. Things change. Neighbourhoods grow, age out and shrink. Immigration changes the type of teaching but also restores growth. Emails have replaced the daily mail. WFH and Learn from home.
If the government ran Block Buster Video and they had job security the stores would still be open but doing nothing. There would be instructors teaching VCR repairs.
If Canada is to prosper EVERY LAST PERSON in the country has to learn to adapt to changes. Unfortunately we have too many old farts high up in the system that still want to do things the old way, simply because they can't understand the new way. Therefore, to them, the new way is wrong.
By all means keep some heritage trades but knob and tube wiring isn't coming back.
Even if contracts expired at the end of June....It
Having contracts expire anytime during the summer recess will never happen -- unions are dead set against that for obvious reasons.
It doesn't matter what your demands are if the government will not come to the table.....I could be wrong on this, but was not CUPE pretty adamant about their initial demand? I remember hearing on some talk radio that at the starting point they refused to accept anything but the outrageously high demand they had which then set thing spiralling towards strike territory.
you are quoting no one! How is Ford genius looking now? We have a strike again! The guy is a genius!I
C'mon man.
You're quoting The Globe, Global & Abacus? Sprinkling a few thoughts from John Fraser and Justin Trudeau would make it more credible.
Lets see how it plays out. They have reached a deal on wages, the outstanding points are related to growing the size of the union's workforce.you are quoting no one! How is Ford genius looking now? We have a strike again! The guy is a genius!
The main concern the unions have is a lockout. In the case of a lockout, 10mo employees get strike pay at the union's expense, and cannot collect UI. It's not a concern for teachers as their deal is based on a daily salary paid over a yearly schedule. It's specifically architected that way (as opposed to an annual salary) to minimize the impact of a lockout or strike. I can't see them ever accepting an annual salary.Even if contracts expired at the end of June....
Of course both sides will want the contract to end when it is best for them, and will negotiate that. Sitting government will want it to be after the next election, not just before--that is their win and most important to them. The government in this case understands they have no leverage in July and August and after the election is their best option.
- First most of CUPE are not paid over the summer, so it is a defacto beginning of the school year as the summer is nothing to them.
- Teachers are paid 10 over 12 by contract so the summer pay is pay already earned in the past 10 months. Lock them out, that money is still owed legally.
- Even IF the above two were overcome, the only leverage is to lock out people that are not at work anyways... because the unions can just sit at the table until September.
- In all three cases a June end provides near 0 leverage... I would hope by now the above would be understood by most people????
A great strategic example was Sweaty Bob making the Toronto garbage contract (the employees not the contracted out portion) end right after the PanAm games, not before, taking their leverage of a strike before away. Major win for the city no one talks about much.
Got it....this was all part of the plan. To stonewall and then give up the hardline after the kids lose school and they say darn it they are striking again! Genius.Lets see how it plays out. They have reached a deal on wages, the outstanding points are related to growing the size of the union's workforce.
CUPE wants guarantees the gov't will increase staffing levels to what they see fit.
Wow, really, lol????The main concern the unions have is a lockout. In the case of a lockout, 10mo employees get strike pay at the union's expense, and cannot collect UI. It's not a concern for teachers as their deal is based on a daily salary paid over a yearly schedule. It's specifically architected that way (as opposed to an annual salary) to minimize the impact of a lockout or strike. I can't see them ever accepting an annual salary.
And thats how the union (It's a business) gets paid.Lets see how it plays out. They have reached a deal on wages, the outstanding points are related to growing the size of the union's workforce.
CUPE wants guarantees the gov't will increase staffing levels to what they see fit.
Why bother? Union proved that laws don't matter to them.Are they going to notwithstanding them back them back, since the union has left the table to strike again?
The fines would add up and bring the debt down or pay the interest.Why bother? Union proved that laws don't matter to them.
the ironyWhy bother? Union proved that laws don't matter to them.
You can disagree with what the politicians did but it was legal. The union violated a law.the irony