OPSEU president calls for recognition of bargaining rights “at the earliest possible moment”

February 11, 2008 Blank Spacer

LONDON, ONTARIO – OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas is calling on the McGuinty government and Ontario’s colleges to recognize his union as the bargaining agent for more than 12,500 part-time and sessional college employees “at the earliest possible moment.”

“We are calling on the McGuinty government to move quickly to establish a legislative framework for part-time and sessional workers to take part in collective bargaining, as is their right under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” said Thomas. “However, we do not believe that these workers should have to wait one second longer than necessary while a new law is drafted, debated, and passed.

“Justice delayed is justice denied,” he said. “These workers have waited too long.”

Speedy recognition of bargaining rights for college part-timers and sessionals should not be a problem, Thomas said, as all parties with an interest in the college system have voiced their support for it – the workers, the McGuinty government, the colleges themselves, and (most recently) the government’s advisor on the issue, Kevin Whitaker.

In his report released last week, Whitaker (who also serves as Chair of the Ontario Labour Relations Board) said that “There is no justification for excluding these employees from collective bargaining. Part-time employees should be immediately granted the right to unionize.”

In the past, part-timers and sessionals had been barred from collective bargaining by a section of the Colleges Collective Bargaining Act. Then, in June 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that collective bargaining is a protected right under the Charter of Rights of Freedoms. OPSEU launched its organizing drive not long after.

“In the next couple of months, we aim to demonstrate conclusively that part-time and sessional employees at Ontario’s colleges want our union to represent them,” said Thomas. “In our view, that’s the only thing that matters. After that, collective bargaining should begin right away.”

Thomas said that a decision on the matter is ultimately in the hands of John Milloy, Minister of Training, Colleges, and Universities.

“While the colleges like to see themselves as independent entities, the fact of the matter is that they are publicly-funded creatures of the province and, through the Minister, directly accountable to the people of Ontario,” he said. “He has the power to direct the colleges, and he should.”

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For more information:
David Cox, OPSEU Communications: (416) 443-8888 ext.8314; (416) 788-9197 (cell)
 


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