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View Full Version : York Strikers to be forced Back on the Job



The Intransigent Faction
26th January 2009, 23:20
The Ontario New Democratic Party put the government on notice that it will do everything in its power to delay back-to-work legislation to end the strike at York University. New Democrat Leader Howard Hampton told reporters on Monday that he won't consent to a request by the governing Liberals to have the legislature sit until midnight Monday night, so that the legislation can be passed into law.
“I'm not prepared to participate in the McGuinty government's kangaroo court process,” Mr. Hampton told reporters following a raucous Question Period.
He accused the government of trying to sweep under the carpet its own “sorry” record on funding universities by trying to force an end to the strike, now in its 12th week. Ontario ranks last in all of Canada on university funding, he said.


Deputy Premier George Smitherman said during Question Period that Mr. Hampton stands in the way as the “last remaining barrier” to getting 50,000 students back into the classroom.
“We seek to have a legislature that acts decisively, and Mr. Hampton seeks to belabour this point, to stretch things out and to continue to put in peril the learning opportunities for students,” Mr. Smitherman told reporters.
Second-reading debate on the back-to-work legislation is set to begin Monday afternoon. The New Democrats plan to make full use of the rules to hold up the legislation. All 10 members of the NDP caucus plan to speak during the 6.5 hours allocated for second-reading debate. Mr. Hampton will begin by speaking for a full hour. The other nine caucus members will each speak for 20 minutes, bringing the party's total speaking time to four hours.
Three Progressive Conservative MPPs plan to speak for 20 minutes each. At the conclusion of the 6.5 hours, the government can introduce a time-allocation motion to limit further debate.
The Tories fully support the government's back-to-work legislation. But they have criticized the government for not stepping in sooner. Progressive Conservative MPP Peter Shurman said in Question Period that the government should have intervened as early as last November, when it was already apparent that management and the union were deadlocked.
“Did you figure students hadn't suffered enough by that point,” he said.


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090126.wyork_strike0126/BNStory/National/home

So, it seems that the administration at York is turning to their buddies in the Liberal government to force an end to the strike.
I'm glad that at least one mainstream party (New Democratic Party---reformist Social Democrats) is vowing to fight back-to-work legislation.
Unfortunately, the prevailing public sentiment around here seems to be "Damn greedy unions!" Hopefully people turn their eyes to the real source of the problem. For now, it seems like teaching assistants will be forced back on the job with wages below the poverty line.

jake williams
27th January 2009, 00:36
The union bashing that has come up around this is ugly, it's frightening and I'm starting to think that we're going to be seeing a lot more of it in the near future.

Yes, the NDP is basically reformist social democrat, but I am glad they've taken this stand. That said, it has been awhile since they've done anything useful, and someone's probably decided they have to actually do something for workers now and then or they're going to be totally irrelevant.

Charles Xavier
27th January 2009, 00:44
Wages aren't the issue in this, its job security which the province isn't offering.

jake williams
27th January 2009, 01:42
Wages aren't the issue in this, its job security which the province isn't offering.
It's a bit of both as far as I understand. But there's also a general context - economic crises mean intensified class warfare, and that means a flood of anti-union propaganda.

Charles Xavier
27th January 2009, 01:47
CUPE Local 3903 workers at York University, and supporters, will rally tomorrow morning (Tuesday) at 10 AM at the Ministry of Labour and then march on Queen's Park to protest the Liberals' back-to-work legislation. It's expected the back-to-work legislation will pass the Legislature tomorrow, supported by the Tories. The NDP's intentions are unclear.



Please come and help show our support for these workers, and our opposition to the Liberals and Tories who have deliberately starved Ontario universities, planning to run them instead on the backs of university employees and students who are carrying the highest debt loads anywhere.



10 AM

Tuesday Jan 27

Ministry of Labour (University and Dundas)

march to the Legislature

The Intransigent Faction
27th January 2009, 04:19
CUPE Local 3903 workers at York University, and supporters, will rally tomorrow morning (Tuesday) at 10 AM at the Ministry of Labour and then march on Queen's Park to protest the Liberals' back-to-work legislation. It's expected the back-to-work legislation will pass the Legislature tomorrow, supported by the Tories. The NDP's intentions are unclear.



Please come and help show our support for these workers, and our opposition to the Liberals and Tories who have deliberately starved Ontario universities, planning to run them instead on the backs of university employees and students who are carrying the highest debt loads anywhere.



10 AM

Tuesday Jan 27

Ministry of Labour (University and Dundas)

march to the Legislature

Jammoe is right. I know job security is an issue, but I have heard a lot about the issue of wages.

bretty
27th January 2009, 08:41
I'm a student here and the anti-union is strong amongst the students now. But I know lots of students who are also just really mostly pissed off at York.. which is my position on this. Nobody really knows what to think anymore between the people I know.

genstrike
27th January 2009, 16:07
So, it seems that the administration at York is turning to their buddies in the Liberal government to force an end to the strike.
I'm glad that at least one mainstream party (New Democratic Party---reformist Social Democrats) is vowing to fight back-to-work legislation.

Yeah, but where were the NDP during the TTC strike? Right in Queens Park, voting for back-to-work legislation.

The NDP are not friends of working people.

Charles Xavier
27th January 2009, 17:41
The NDP are opportunists. They will take a stand when it politically suits them.

The Intransigent Faction
27th January 2009, 20:17
The NDP are opportunists. They will take a stand when it politically suits them.

I'm not one to defend reformists, but the NDP are alone on this issue, so they've made quite a few enemies. It's not popular to support CUPE right now.

Nevertheless, you are merely re-stating the obvious.
I am by no means defending the NDP as a party, but in this particular case, they're doing the right thing...so far. Nobody's saying this position on back-to-work legislation will be consistent, but it could be worse than it is at the moment.

jake williams
27th January 2009, 22:45
Yeah, but where were the NDP during the TTC strike? Right in Queens Park, voting for back-to-work legislation.
I think this hurt them with a part of their base, and they're retreating a bit. That's okay, it might be a bit of opportunism but it's also helpful opportunism.

The Intransigent Faction
29th January 2009, 04:47
Apparently the union is giving in...

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5izwT34LiEPHzbnblR11XL1sqFsCw

jake williams
29th January 2009, 05:06
Apparently the union is giving in...

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5izwT34LiEPHzbnblR11XL1sqFsCw
I have mixed feelings about this decision. I don't like that they're making this concession, but you can see why they would.