| 6 and out rule gets deep 6 OPSEU will seek reinstatement for fired ambulance officers
The Ontario government has rescinded a regulation under the
Ambulance Act which made it illegal for Ambulance Officers to have six driving demerit
points.
Six Ambulance Officers lost their jobs under the regulation
when they accumulated six points. OPSEU has been fighting the rule which applied only to
ambulance staff, and not to police or firefighters.
However, the government is not reinstating the Ambulance
Officers who lost their jobs because of the regulation.
"They have recognized the rule is unjust and change
it. Now they have to deal with the people who were hurt by the unjust rule," said
President Leah Casselman.
Ambulance Officers were prepared to fight to change the
rule. Theyll keep up the fight until their dismissed colleagues are reinstated, said
Jamie Ramage of Local 256, co-chair of the unions ambulance division.
"Weve won half a victory, but were not
giving up until weve won it all," said Ramage.
The government has said that the fired officers can reapply
for their jobs, but hiring them is up to the individual ambulance service.
"That just wont do," said Casselman.
"It was the governments action in passing the regulation that took these
members jobs away. It is the governments responsibility to make sure that they
get their jobs back, with compensation for the time they were out of work," she said.
"We wont let this drop without a fight."
Two
locals on strike
About 200 staff who work for the Alcohol and Gaming
Commission of Ontario walked off the job Nov. 1 in support of first contract demands.
Members of Local 565, they enforce Ontarios laws on
gambling and licenced premises. They want enforceable wage rates in their contract, and
they want their benefits spelled out in the contract.
The employer refuses to write benefits into the contract
and refuses to consider a wage grid.
OPSEU has responded to the last offer from the employer, in
an exchange which occurred four days before the walkout. The union is still waiting for a
response to its position.
Members of Local 641, on strike against the Intergarin
Communtaire Cochrane Community Living in Cochrane since Sept.27 are still on the picket
lines.
You can send support for the AGCO strikers to the
Queens Park office, and to the Cochrane strikers to the Timmins office.
OPSEU
welcomes 2,100 new members
Members of the Association of Allied Health Professionals:
Ontario have voted to join OPSEU. They came into the OPSEU fold effective Nov. 1.
AAHP:O represented medical technologists, respiratory
technologists, X-ray technologists, speech therapists and other licenced health care
staff.
Similar occupations form OPSEUs medical division, and
OPSEU is the largest union in Ontario representing these health care workers.
President Leah Casselman welcomed Allied members. "We
will work together to protect and defend the dedicated health care professionals who are
threatened by the Ontario governments plan to privatize the health care system and
close hospitals."
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