TORONTO – Results of the vote by faculty in
Ontario’s 24 community colleges on the employer’s last contract
offer are too close to determine whether the offer has been
accepted or rejected.
Faculty have voted 51 per cent to accept the
employer’s offer, a margin of just 210 votes. Now at issue is
the number of mail-in votes, over 300 ballots, which once
received could change the vote results. Those results may not be
known for up to 10 days or more.
Ted Montgomery, chair of the OPSEU bargaining
team for the faculty, says that the union will have to get a
clear determination of the final vote count before any decisions
are made.
“Right now we do not have a clear and final
majority either way,” Montgomery said. “Until we know for sure
whether our members have accepted or rejected the employer
offer, we cannot move forward.”
Montgomery said that if the offer is ultimately
rejected, the union will then determine a new strike date and
call on the Colleges to return to the bargaining table to
negotiate a fair collective agreement.
“If rejected, we will ask the employer to
immediately resume negotiations,” Montgomery said. “And, failing
a negotiated contract, we will again urge the Colleges to submit
all outstanding issues to binding arbitration.”
OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas says if
the eventual outcome is a rejection of the employer’s offer, a
strike can still be completely avoided.
“We do not want any disruption to the students,”
Thomas said. “We have maintained the position all along that if
we can’t get an agreement, binding arbitration is how we want to
proceed. If the Colleges don’t agree, then they and they alone
will be responsible for jeopardizing the education of 200,000
Ontario college students.”