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The Intransigent Faction
21st March 2012, 05:15
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/inside-workers-set-to-vote-on-strike-mandate/article2374525/


Although the Toronto Public Library and its workers are prepared to talk again, the first labour disruption of Rob Fords mayoralty has already raised the stakes for another union, the citys largest, as it seeks a strike mandate of its own.More than 23,000 inside workers are eligible to cast ballots on Tuesday, and theyll be wrestling with the same issue that drove library workers to the picket lines: job security in the Ford era.

Mr. Ford and his deputy mayor have made it clear they want to weaken so-called jobs for life protections for library and inside workers, as they did for outside workers with less than 15 years of seniority in a hard-fought deal reached with CUPE Local 416 in February.
I dont see how they can expect us to give them more than we gave 416, deputy mayor Doug Holyday said. They want it so that there is no contracting out, which would give job security not just to permanent employees but to all, even temporary and part-time people. No one in the real world does that. Just how far can they take such a matter?
Mr. Holyday was speaking specifically about CUPE Local 79 whose workers will be in a legal strike or lockout position at 12:01 a.m. Saturday but job security is also at the centre of the library dispute.
The [Toronto Public Library] board is still seeking to gut job security so that more than half of our membership is vulnerable to job loss, making it easier for the city to close branches in the next budget, Maureen OReilly, president of CUPE Local 4948, told hundreds of striking library workers at a rally at Nathan Phillips Square on Monday.
Torontos 2,300 library employees walked off the job on Sunday, shuttering 98 branches and halting all but some online library services. The strike is the first in the amalgamated librarys history.
Both sides in the dispute have kept open their negotiating rooms at the Westin Prince Hotel on York Mills Road, where marathon talks took place on the weekend.
A CUPE spokesman said the union was ready to talk again on Monday night, but he couldnt promise a meeting would happen.
Councillor Paul Ainslie, chair of the library board, said he was shocked the union opted to strike. He said he figured, wed all reach our merry compromise and life would go on because theyre librarians. Theyre not radical.
Torontos cherished public library system wasnt expected to be the first battleground in the Ford administrations long-awaited clash with organized labour.
Public outpouring of love for libraries helped fend off deep cuts to the system last year, and librarians tend to enjoy broader support than the garbage collectors and other municipal workers who walked off the job for 39 days in 2009.
I would bet dollars to doughnuts they [the Ford administration] were expecting the brawl to be with 416, said Cim Nunn, a CUPE spokesman. I think, frankly, what they would have preferred was that we not jump out of sequence.
In the past, the library union has settled after 416 and 79 reached deals. This time, the library union asked the province for a no-board report that put its deadline ahead of that of the inside workers.
Mr. Ainslie said he doesnt believe putting librarians on the picket line will make a strike any more palatable to Torontonians.
I think there is a big difference between peoples love of libraries and their love of library unions, he said.
Right now, all permanent full- and part-time library workers are protected from losing their posts to privatization, new technology or layoffs. In the case of Local 79, the clause applies only to permanent, full-time staff, a CUPE spokeswoman confirmed.
If the city tried to shutter branches, it would be obligated to find the displaced workers comparable jobs at other libraries, negating the savings.
But Mr. Ainslie insisted again on Monday that management has no intention of laying off workers or closing branches. The board passed a motion barring branch closings last fall.
Asked why the board is seeking to weaken the jobs for life clause if it isnt planning to lay off workers or close libraries, Mr. Ainslie would only say the city is trying to apply the 416 template to all of its workers. But he added that the library board had already reduced the threshold to below the 15-year cutoff that applied to Local 416.


The part that really caught my attention was

"They want it so that there is no contracting out, which would give job security not just to permanent employees but to all, even temporary and part-time people. No one in the real world does that."

Yeah, it's a law of nature that part-time workers can't have job security. ...Prick.

NewLeft
21st March 2012, 05:17
I fire Rob Ford. We should contract out his job.

blake 3:17
22nd March 2012, 00:12
Please see http://ourpubliclibrary.to/ It's the unions's community support page which has been excellent.

I met a friend who's on strike and picketed the reference library for a few hours this afternoon. The pickets were spirited and positive.

Here's the union's FB page: https://www.facebook.com/TPLWULocal4948

This is an FB page for non-members but want to support positively: https://www.facebook.com/groups/371115016255151/

This is a big fight!

blake 3:17
22nd March 2012, 18:30
Mass Rally at City Hall for striking library workers, Friday March 23, 10am - 2pm, Nathan Phillips Square. Please come out!

FB event: https://www.facebook.com/events/348820665169489/

blake 3:17
23rd March 2012, 21:37
Occupy the picket lines: support Toronto library/city workers

Posted on March 23, 2012

CUPE 79 members join library workers on the picket line

After being pushed back from a year of organizing against cuts to public services, the millionaire mayor Rob Ford is trying to cut services by attacking the workers who provide them. Whenever one group of workers fights back, we all need to join them on the picket line.

In 2009 the City of Toronto blamed workers for the recession. Without broad solidarity, city workers were isolated and the millionaire mayor Rob Ford rode to office on a backlash–and then unleashed his austerity agenda on public services.

But labour and community groups have fought back, with over a year of organizing–demonstrations, deputations, town hall meetings, petitions, and calls to councillors. This grassroots organizing in workplaces and neighbourhoods has eroded Ford’s support on city council, leading to a series of humiliating defeats that few would have thought possible just a few months ago–from stopping some budget cuts, stopping the mass closure of libraries, delaying the sell off of social housing, and derailing Ford’s plans for transit.

Job cuts = service cuts

But each step of the way, Ford has tried to force through his agenda by going after workers.

He began his term in office by revoking transit workers’ right to strike and privatizing garbage collection. When months of organizing won a majority of Torontonians to oppose cuts to public services, Rob Ford declared last September that “the gravy is the number of employees we have at City Hall.”

On December 1, Ford celebrated the anniversary of coming to office by announcing 1,200 job losses, the biggest layoff in the city’s history and another clear attack on public services.

When Toronto outdoor workers (represented by CUPE 416) tried to negotiate by offering a wage freeze and promising not to strike, Ford went on the offensive and forced a contract that strips employment protection, and is now trying to force concessions like this on library workers and city workers.

Support library workers

Attacks on library workers have been Ford’s main strategy for carrying out attacks on public libraries, as library worker Jonathan Hodge explained:

“The Toronto Public Library Board is pursuing a course that will severely undermine the library services that Torontonians hold dear. Already, budgets cuts have resulted in the loss of over 100 full-time equivalent positions, including the entire office for services to people with disabilities! This is on top of a 17% reduction in staffing over the last 12 years, while library circulation has increased over 25% in that same period.”

The main issue behind the current strike is Ford’s attempt to attack workers to pave the way for attacks on services. As TPLWU local 4948 president Maureen O’Reilly explained:

“At the end, the City’s negotiators would not budge from their demand for the right to fire librarians and staff anytime they want, for whatever reason they want. This is the stumbling block. In all good conscience, it is a demand that we cannot accept. Especially after you and thousands of others defended our public library with such passion and conviction. For if we did, the door would be wide open for Mayor Ford and his allies on Council to fire the staff that run your neighbourhood branch, then close it. Or, to fire staff to make it easy to privatize entire library services.”

Solidarity overdue

Rob Ford is attacking city workers as a way to salvage and continue his agenda. Economically, smashing the union benefits the 1%. Ideologically, it divides the majority who oppose his cuts to services. Politically it regains a majority on council. Lack of solidarity with city workers let Rob Ford come to power, and we can’t repeat the same mistake.

Library workers launched the campaign to defend libraries that became a lightning rod for opposition to Ford last summer, and city workers have been part of the major mobilizations in the streets, and campaigns in neighbourhoods.

Now library workers are defending picket lines and inside city workers have voted for a strike mandate.

It’s clear from Ford’s treatment of outdoor city workers that he only has contempt for negotiating, and that the bargaining table is stacked against jobs and services. But Ford is weak in the streets and on the picket lines, and it’s here that the 99% can show our strength.

Ford has already been pushed back on a number of fronts on public services–from the budget, to social housing, to transit–but he continues his agenda on the backs of workers. If the same support for public services can support the workers who provide them, then Ford’s agenda could be stopped.

* join a picket line

* contact your councillor and tell them to support library and city workers

* put up a window sign supporting workers


This link is to the article, but also a couple of graphics, most importantly the window sign supporting Library workers.

: http://socialistworkercanada.com/2012/03/23/occupy-the-picket-lines-support-toronto-librarycity-workers/