CAAT (A) Collective Bargaining

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#3 – June 23, 2009
Bargaining is under way
In keeping with
legislative requirements, on June 3 the union sent notice to bargain to the
Council, which acts on behalf of the colleges. On Monday, June 8, the union
negotiating team met face-to-face with the management group.
Bargaining is
well under way. Bargaining dates have been set through June, July, and August.
The management
group is chaired by Rachael Donovan, Senior Vice-President at Fleming College.
Other members of the management group are:
-
George
Burton, Vice-President, Enrolment Management and Student Services at
Loyalist;
-
Nancy Hood,
Director of Human Resources at George Brown;
-
Renee Kenny,
Associate Vice-President, Business Development at Centennial;
-
Glenn Toikka,
Vice-President, Finance and Administration at Cambrian;
-
Don Sinclair,
Executive Director, the Council;
-
Morris
Uremovich, Associate Director, the Council;
-
Christiane
Émond, Consultant, the Council.
The management
group is assisted by Wallace Kenney of the law firm Hicks Morley.
The employer
introduced its approach to this round of negotiations by saying it was directed
by a set of values. The employer said:
We will make
every effort to maintain and improve the working environment for our faculty
so that they have every opportunity to contribute to our students’ success.
We acknowledge that Colleges are public institutions and the importance of
maintaining our responsibility and accountability to the public we serve. We
need to ensure students can easily access our programs when and where they
need them. We wish to encourage academic excellence for our learners. We
endorse innovation and creativity in bringing resolution to the issues. We
will maintain the highest degree of integrity. We will be working towards a
sustainable positive bargaining relationship with the Union and its members
through co-operation and problem solving with the employees’ bargaining
agent.
Time will tell if
management’s negotiating style is true to its stated values. The union demands,
particularly those concerned with workload improvement and academic freedom, are
consistent with and support these values. The Union will be tabling workload
proposals that are in keeping with the unanimous recommendations of the Workload
Task Force (see below).
The Task Force
recommendations will provoke discussion of how workload is calculated. The Union
is committed to no concessions in bargaining and the Task Force report offers
recommendations that afford faculty greater control over workload calculation.
The report of the
Task Force (see sidebar) recognizes the need for provisions for improved
collegiality and academic freedom. Faculty concerns in this area were clearly
recognized by the Task Force.
The Workload Task Force
Report: how it relates to bargaining
After the 2006
round of bargaining, arbitrator William Kaplan established the Workload Task
Force to make recommendations on workload issues in CAAT-Academic bargaining. In
March 2009, the Task Force submitted its unanimous report.
Kaplan appointed
Wesley Rayner, an arbitrator who is a former professor and dean at the
University of Western Ontario Law School, to chair the Task Force. Morris
Uremovich, an employee of the Council and a member of the management bargaining
team in 2003 and now 2009, was appointed as the colleges’ nominee. Marcus
Harvey, Ph.D., whose job title is Professional Officer (Policy & Research) for
the Canadian Association of University Teachers, was OPSEU’s nominee.
A basic finding
of the Workload Task Force was that there was a need for the parties to address
deficiencies and weaknesses in the college system relating to academic freedom,
collegiality, and respect for academic professionalism.
One of the
conclusions of the Task Force is that for the majority of programs and teachers
the basic structure of the formula system works adequately. However, the report
finds that the application of the formula is problematic and makes
recommendations to deal with this.
While the report
is not ideal, it still addresses a number of issues that college faculty have
expressed through their demands. The Task Force Report highlights seven areas:
-
flexibility;
-
preparation;
-
evaluation;
-
complementary
functions;
-
professional
development;
-
workload
dispute mechanisms; and
-
professional
standards and relationships.
Flexibility
Recommendation (i)
addresses the issue of flexibility with the intent of “…finding a mechanism or
structure that permits the parties to determine when and how the formula should
be modified.” The Task Force includes a subset of recommendations to limit the
extent to which any flexibility might be incorporated into the collective
agreement.
Preparation
The Task Force
acknowledges that there is a difference between curriculum development and class
preparation. In their opinion, when the “… modification meets a certain level
(affecting 20% or more of the course content) the time spent on the conversion
should be treated as curriculum development and added to the SWF according to
the provisions made by the Collective Agreement in Article 11.01 D3 (ix).”
Evaluation
The Task Force
stresses that “the determination of evaluation methods should flow from
consultations between [teachers] responsible for delivering the courses and the
manager responsible for the overall program. Where teachers and managers cannot
agree on evaluative methods, their dispute should be resolved through the
existing appeal mechanisms and the decision of the WMG[1]
(or the WRA[2]).”
Further, “The
underlying practical issue in the area is how the decision to adopt a particular
evaluation method is made…. [T]his practical issue masks more fundamental
questions of academic freedom, professional expertise, and collegiality.”
The Task Force
recommendation for evaluation is that, “We recommend that for each program
and/or course the evaluation methods be set in a consultative process by the
affected faculty as a group and the academic manager and with the manager’s
approval placed in the course outline. All teachers are to abide by that
outline. Any disputes between the faculty and the manager emerging from that
consultative process are to follow the normal dispute resolution procedure,
i.e., the WMG and the WRA.”
Complementary functions
The Task Force makes a recommendation to address the
relationship between total student contact hours and student demands on faculty
members’ time. This issue has been a faculty concern in a number of negotiation
rounds. Recommendation (iv) states, “We recommend that the parties negotiate a
mechanism to address concerns over increased time needed for out of class
student assistance when the total number of students taught reaches levels above
the norm. We have adopted the concept of total number of students as the most
workable basis for such a mechanism. To accomplish this mechanism, the parties
should negotiate the following components: namely, a threshold number based on
the total number of students taught that would reflect the existing notional
four hours of out of class assistance now provided, and an escalator that would
provide additional hour(s) for student assistance under complementary function.”
Professional
development
Throughout the
report, the Task Force addresses the need for and importance of professional
development. Though it does not make a specific recommendation on the subject,
the Task Force does note that “…the need for professional development time for
training, networking, becoming familiar with changes in the existing technology,
and research must be met if the college system is to remain vibrant.” A number
of positions passed at the union demand-setting meeting address this issue.
Workload
disputes
On the question
of the workload dispute mechanism, the Task Force drew two positive conclusions:
1) the total number of complaints does not appear to be excessive, and 2) the
system seems to work well. The Task Force Report specifically states that if
their recommendations in the area of flexibility are accepted it follows that
the Union would have standing before the WRA.
Professional
standards and relationships
The dominant
theme of the Task Force Report is that collegiality, academic freedom and
professional development are important objectives if the college system is to be
vibrant..
The seventh and concluding recommendation of the Report is
that “We recommend, therefore, that the parties consider mechanisms that will
enhance collegiality, professional development, and academic freedom.”
The bargaining
team will use the Workload Task Force Report in addressing a number of issues
that union members have submitted to make improvements to the collective
agreement.
Why “the Precautionary Principle” matters to your health and safety at work
Community
colleges are large, complex public institutions. To ensure the health and safety
of students, support staff, administration and faculty, the bargaining team has
proposed changes to Article 24.02A of the collective agreement to enshrine “the
precautionary principle” as the guiding philosophy of the Health and Safety
Committees..
The precautionary
principle is an approach to eliminating hazards before they cause harm and is
generally defined as follows: Where there is reasonable evidence of an impending
threat to health or safety, proof beyond a reasonable doubt is not required
before taking steps to avert a threat.
The principle of
precautionary action has four components:
··
People have a duty to take action to prevent harm
before it happens. If there is a reasonable suspicion that something bad may
happen, then there is an obligation to try to prevent it.
·
The burden of proof of harmlessness of a new
technology, process, activity, or chemical lies with those who wish to use or
introduce it.
··
Before using a new technology, process, or chemical,
or starting a new activity, people have an obligation to examine a full range of
alternatives, including the alternative of doing nothing.
·
Decisions applying the precautionary principle must be
open, informed, and democratic and must include the effected parties.
Old adages such
as “better safe than sorry,” “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,”
and “look before you leap” speak to the common-sense approach of the
precautionary principle. Unfortunately, society has been slow to embrace these
principles. For example in the 1920s, the petrochemical and automobile
corporations announced that they were going to add lead to gasoline. Public
health officials argued that the possible repercussions should be studied first.
The corporations won in court and it took almost 60 years to remove this
dangerous additive..
Slowly the tide
has been turning. In 1996, the American Public Health Association passed a
resolution entitled, “The Precautionary Principle and Chemical Exposure
Standards for the Workplace.” The resolution recognized the need for the
precautionary principle and the need to consider chemicals potentially dangerous
until the extent of their toxicity is known.
In 1999, the
Ontario Federation of Labour passed a policy paper entitled “Occupational
Disease: Shifting the Burden” which called on the OFL and its affiliates to
include the precautionary principle in the introduction of new substances,
processes or job designs into the workplace.
More recently in
January 2007, the final report of the SARS Commission, under Mr. Justice Archie
Campbell of the Superior Court of Justice released his report in which he called
repeatedly for the introduction and use of the precautionary principle:
That the
precautionary principle, which states that action to reduce risk need not await
scientific certainty, be expressly adopted as a guiding principle throughout
Ontario’s health, public health and worker safety systems by way of policy
statement, by explicit reference in all relevant operational standards and
directions, and by way of inclusion, through preamble, statement of principle,
or otherwise, in the Occupational Health and Safety Act, the Health Protection
and Promotion Act, and all relevant statutes and regulations….
If the Commission has one single
take-home message it is the precautionary principle that safety comes first,
that reasonable efforts to reduce risk need not await scientific proof….
Perhaps the
most important lesson of SARS is the importance of the precautionary principle.
SARS demonstrated over and over the importance of the principle that we cannot
wait for scientific certainty before we take reasonable steps to reduce risk.
This principle should be adopted as a guiding principle throughout Ontario’s
health, public health and worker safety system….
…we should
not be driven by scientific dogma of yesterday or even the scientific dogma of
today. We should be driven by the precautionary principle that reasonable steps
to reduce risk should not await scientific certainty.
In defining the
precautionary principle, Justice Campbell relied on the work of a previous
commission, the Krever Report on the Blood System in Canada, in which Mr.
Justice Krever said:
Where there is reasonable evidence of an
impending threat to public health, it is inappropriate to require proof of
causation beyond a reasonable doubt before taking steps to avert the threat..
It would be disappointing if management, for
any reason, would reject including the precautionary principle in the collective
agreement for college faculty in Ontario
The Workload Monitoring
Group is a joint union-management group established at every college
under Article 11 of the collective agreement between OPSEU and the
colleges.
Under Article 11 of the collective agreement,
Workload Resolution Arbitrators have the power to rule on
individual workload disputes where the WMG is unable to come to a
resolution. Decisions made by WRAs are final and binding on the college,
the Union, and the teacher in question.
Negotiations News is authorized for distribution by Ted
Montgomery, Chair, CAAT-Academic bargaining team, and Warren (Smokey) Thomas,
President
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
100 Lesmill Road, Toronto, ON M3B 3P8
www.opseu.org
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