National Executive Meeting Wrap-Up

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The National Executive met recently, in a meeting that was largely dominated by convention preparations. And it’s no wonder; with convention only a few months away, you’ll be waking up in beautiful British Columbia before you know it (albeit, a bit jet-lagged)!

The highlight of the meeting was the announcement that our UNE family won’t be split apart. As reported in an earlier article, Pɑssport Canada members will be staying with the UNE.

The meeting was also a great opportunity to extend our thanks to Garry Larouche, who announced that he will be retiring sometime after convention. Garry has been involved with our union since 1977 and was a powerful voice on many TC-group bargaining teams.

Andy Yung was also thanked for his service to our union, as he will be taking a hiatus from his assistant regional vice-president position during the next mandate. Andy was given kudos for his talents with numbers and his skills with hospitality suites.

After the conclusion of the National Executive meeting, it was off to the races! …the race to tackle convention resolutions, that is. There were three convention committees charged with examining all the resolutions that will be presented at convention.

All in all, there were over 60 resolutions submitted to convention. Members will be able to peruse these resolutions shortly, once we put the finishing touches on each committee’s report.

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A group photo taken during the national executive

 

 

Pɑssport members to stay with UNE

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During the recent national executive meeting, National President Doug Marshall announced that our union was now in a position to assure our members at Pɑssport Canada that they would indeed stay with the Union of National Employees.

Our members in many Pɑssport locals were worried that the recent dissolution of their agency would see them going to another component within the Public Service Alliance of Canada (jargon explanation: “components” are unions within the Public Service Alliance of Canada – there are 17 of them, of which the UNE is the second largest).

When the news was announced at the national executive meeting, the room burst into applause. The reaction was very similar during an Outside Canada caucus meeting held last Friday.

“Doug was invited as a guest to our caucus meeting; that’s when he announced that it was definitive – that we were staying with the UNE,” explained Assistant Regional Vice-President Karl Lafrenière.

“Everyone applauded.”

Lafrenière is quick to credit this victory to National President Doug Marshall, who he said led the charge to keep his members.

To say that Pɑssport members are passionate about their spot in the UNE would be an understatement. While things were still uncertain, they did what they could to keep sporting our colours.

The UNE received one resolution asking that Pɑssport Canada members be allowed to vote on which component should represent them. Given that this is no longer required, the resolution was ruled out of order and won’t make it to convention floor.

There was also a petition, started at the grassroots level, which circulated among the membership and obtained the signature of a majority of all Pɑssport members. The individuals who wrote the petition were about to present it to PSAC President Robyn Benson, but the news that they weren’t changing components came first!

When asked why he thought his members were so fervently trying to stay part UNE, Lafrenière said it all comes down to service.

“Most of the people we talk with say the service is excellent. When we call for help, we get help. When we call with questions, we get answers,” said Lafrenière, who represents more than 900 Pɑssport members in his role as assistant regional vice-president. “The representation we get is excellent.”

For his part, National President Doug Marshall says the effort to keep Pɑssport members within the UNE was a group effort, supported by the national executive, local members and staff.

“For the UNE, it wasn’t just about a loss of membership,” explained National President Doug Marshall. “Had we lost our Pɑssport members, we would have lost some really strong leaders who are involved at all levels of our union – leaders who make our union strong.”

 

You too can be a leader!

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As convention approaches, many members will be gearing up to run for some of our national and regional positions. It’s thanks to dedicated union members at all levels that we’re able to accomplish the important work we do on behalf of our membership.

Whether or not you attend convention, you can run for elected office. On voting day, we will be voting for the following positions:

  • National president
  • National executive vice-president
  • National vice-president for human rights
  • Assistant national vice-president for human rights
  • Regional vice-presidents
  • Assistant regional vice-presidents
  • Regional human rights representatives
  • Alternate regional human rights representatives
  • Delegates and alternates to the PSAC convention

Any member in good standing can run for these positions, as long as their candidacy is supported by a nominator and seconder who are delegates to convention. Those interested in throwing their hats into the ring should carefully read the nomination letter sent earlier today. You can download the nomination form by clicking here.

Additionally, anyone running for elected office should carefully review our policy Fin 9, which provides all the important details about campaign spending limits and ethical considerations. All candidates must provide a written report of all expenses, even if no expenses are incurred.

Finally, if you’re a delegate to convention, you should be aware that delegates may contact you to support their candidacy – after all, we believe in making informed decisions! Our policies allow for candidates to obtain the personal contact information of delegates who are eligible to vote for the position for which they are seeking office.
This information includes names, addresses, phone numbers and email addresses. Candidates may only use this information to communicate with delegates about their candidacy. They must safeguard all personal contact information as required by our privacy policies.

Duty to accommodate and medical marijuana

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The duty-to-accommodate doesn’t make the news very often, but it did last week in an Ottawa Citizen article examining whether the use of medical marijuana could force the return of smoking rooms.

“In an era of smoking bans on patios, parks and restaurants, the notion may seem absurd, but those relying on marijuana to ease chronic pain and other conditions may soon be demanding accommodation for their medically prescribed and commercially grown medication.”

Medical marijuana use has been on the rise since it was first legalized in 2001. In just over a decade, the number of Canadians authorized to possess medical marijuana has jumped from 477 in 2002 to 37,359 in 2013. Health Canada projects the number to rise to 58,000 in 2014 and skyrocket to 450,000 in another ten years.

It’s no wonder some labour experts are predicting that this will become a big issue – one that is already sparking debate.

Last year, an RCMP officer made headlines when his employer told him he couldn’t smoke his legally prescribed marijuana while in uniform. The officer has been using the drug to help him calm down and treat his PTSD symptoms.

The RCMP felt that smoking in public or while in uniform would “not portray the right message to the general public.”

The use of medical marijuana poses a complex issue for employers, who have to grapple with the duty to accommodate on one side; public perception and health and safety on the other.

Given its long history of being a controlled substance, users of medical marijuana have to combat a certain level of stigma associated with the drug. The Canadian Association of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries hopes that discussions like these will help shift the public perception of marijuana from illicit drug to medicine.

On the health and safety front, some employers may be concerned about a person’s ability to safety and effectively perform their work while taking the drug. It’s important that these employees are not endangering their safety or that of others. In the future, it may be possible for patients to obtain “designer marijuana”; strains of the drug designed to treat specific symptoms without affecting cognitive and motor skills.

But these issues don’t negate the employer’s duty to accommodate these individuals to the point of undue hardship. Fundamentally, these are people who are merely treating a disability.

So, will the duty to accommodate lead to smoking rooms? It could: the cost of establishing a smoking room doesn’t constitute undue hardship. In other cases, a person’s accommodation needs could easily be addressed by simply offering more frequent breaks.

In an article for Occupational Safety Canada, Cheryl Edwards offers a few tips for employers. Among them, she suggests working “with the employee, his union representative and medical professionals to determine what checks and balances will need to be in place to ensure the employee, co-workers, the public and the environment are properly safeguarded.”

Finally, she recommends not getting distracted by the drug causing the impairment, but to focus on the issue of impairment instead.

“Treat this source the same as you would any other prescription drug.”

June: National Aboriginal History Month

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In 1939, thirteen Native people participating in a conference on First Nation welfare took a bold stand. While other delegates busied themselves passing resolutions urging greater attention to the plight of aboriginal communities, the Indian delegation defected to pass a resolution of their own.

The Toronto-Yale Conference on the North American Indian seemed very well-intentioned. Over seventy delegates participated in the two-week affair. Among them were Canadian and American academics, missionaries and government officials.1 Thirteen Native people were invited, among them an Iroquois anthropologist, a Cherokee missionary, a Haida United Church minister and a Six Nations lawyer. The Indian delegation also included Edith Brant Monture; the great-great-granddaughter of famous Iroquois Chief Joseph Brant.2

The conference was designed “to reveal the conditions today of the white man’s Indian wards, and in a scientific, objective and sympathetic spirit, plan with them for their future.” 3

For all of its good intensions, the non-aboriginal conference participants assumed that assimilation was both beneficial and inevitable.

“The guiding belief was that the Indian peoples were to be the recipients of change, not the choosers. In standard colonial parlance, they were variously described as wards or children. It was, however, colonialism with a difference, for the goal was not independence, but disappearance.”4

Since assimilation was viewed as inevitable, the only debates centered on how fast it should happen.

The crackpot ideas machine went into overdrive when Diamond Jenness, a Canadian anthropologist, suggested establishing small colonies of Inuit around major Canadian cities. Because, you know, who wants to live in the North? The anthropologist believed that the Inuit would be better off learning English and marketable skills in southern Canada rather than inevitably becoming unemployed, welfare-dependant and demoralized in the North.5

On the last day of the conference, a resolution was passed calling for greater awareness of “the psychological, social and economic maladjustments of the Indian populations of the United States and Canada.” Then a committee was formed to determine how the conference’s findings should be disseminated. 6

“And then a very dramatic defection took place. The Indian delegates broke from the main group and met separately to pass their own resolutions. […]

While appreciative of their invitation to the conference, the Indians resolved to have their own meetings. They didn’t need government officials, missionaries [or] white sympathizers […] to speak for them.”7

The Native delegates called for an “all-Indian conference on Indian affairs,” comprising of only “bona fide Indian leaders actually living among the Indian people of the reservations and reserves”. Such a conference, they implored, ought to be “free of political, anthropological, missionary, administrative, or other domination.”8

Their bold move, their call to action and the conference overall went largely unnoticed; by the time the event was over, Canada was already one week into its World War 2.


[1] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[2] A Cassidy, F. (1991). Aboriginal self-determination: proceedings of a conference held September 30-October 3, 1990. Lantzville, BC: Oolichan Books.

[3] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[4] Cairns, A. (2000). Citizens plus: aboriginal peoples and the Canadian state. Vancouver: UBC Press.

[5] Idem

[6] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[7] Cassidy, F. (1991). Aboriginal self-determination: proceedings of a conference held September 30-October 3, 1990. Lantzville, BC: Oolichan Books.

[8] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

Members in the dark: ACOA not providing answers

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On Monday, National President Doug Marshall took part in teleconference call with the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency. The Union of National Employees is concerned about its members at Enterprise Cape Breton Corporation who are expected to be transferred to ACOA by the end of June.

Our concerns weren’t abated; ACOA didn’t provide any information about the transfer. ACOA President Paul LeBlanc didn’t volunteer any details beyond the fact that the agency was “working on the transfer.”

“A transfer like this one is incredibly complex,” said Marshall. “There are 33 members there who are transferring from an outside organization to the core public service. Our members have important questions; I find it baffling that ACOA won’t consult with us on issues important to our members.”

This isn’t the first time that the UNE has faced a situation like this. Last year, 60 members at the National Capital Commission were kept in the dark about their salary until the day before their transfer to Canadian Heritage. Needless to say, it caused a lot of problems and scores of grievances that are still not resolved.

The UNE wants to ensure that our members’ concerns are addressed and their questions answered. We are calling on ACOA to work with us and to communicate openly with its employees.

After the teleconference’s conclusion, a disappointed Marshall wrote a letter to Local President Gerard McPhee, of Local 84200 (Enterprise Cape Breton Corporation) to inform him of ACOA’s immovable stance.

You can read the letter by clicking here

The Review needs you!

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Do you work in communications or public relations? Are you bilingual? Do you live near Victoria? We need your help during the UNE2014 Convention, from August 10 to 15.

We’re looking for two on-site reporters to attend the conference and write short articles for us. During our last three conferences, we got help from some very talented members to produce The Review: the UNE’s official conference newsletter.

Related: Check out the past editions of The Review here, here and here.

We’re also looking for a talented photographer. We’ll supply the camera, you get us the smiles!

If you’d like to help (and you’re not a delegate… because, let’s face it, you have a convention to take part in!) send us an email at communications@une-sen.org. Write a short list of your strong points and make sure to indicate your strongest language and your linguistic profile.

Volunteers will be considered observers and will be funded by the UNE. We’ll cover your travel, accommodation, loss-of-pay, per-diem and, if needed, family care.

Building solidarity at the CLC convention

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Just over a week ago, the Canadian Labour of Congress held its convention in Montreal. With close to 5,000 delegates, this mastodon of a convention is big enough to give our teeny-weeny convention a size complex!

During the convention, Hassan Yussuff was elected president; he is the labour organization’s first racially visible president. Yussuf promised delegates that the CLC would be more active.

In her blog, PSAC President Robyn Benson wrote that Yussuf’s election is a reflection of “strong feeling within the labour movement that we need different tactics, a new inclusive strategy, a tougher, member-based approach.”

The landmark election was just one of many noteworthy moments. For Evelyn Beckert, a convention delegate, the event was a great place to be inspired by powerful speakers from a legion of unions across the country. It was also a stark reminder that unions from all sectors are fighting some pretty serious battles.

“I heard from the nurses’ union in British Columbia – about the horrible cutbacks they’re facing,” explained Beckert. “There’s an increased need for medical services, yet there’s more cutbacks.”

Speaking of decisions that don’t make sense: the scrapping of Canada Post’s door-to-door service was front-of-mind for many delegates. Speaking at the convention, Montreal Mayor Dennis Coderre called the move unacceptable.

“I find it unacceptable how Canada Post conducts itself – not only in regards to its workers, but in how it treats all citizens,” said Coderre. “And I demand that Stephen Harper intervenes once and for all.”

Coderre said the issue goes beyond labour; it’s about respecting citizens. He also pointed out how changes to door-to-door service will affect those with mobility issues and the elderly.

“Getting your mail is essential,” he declared. “There are 6,000 to 8,000 people who could lose their jobs. No one’s going to come around and make me believe that it’s all going to magically happen through attrition.”

“There are jobs that are going to be cut. And I want you to know that the municipal sector is behind you and we’ll support you to the end.”

Delegates were moved by the show of solidarity. From Beckert’s point of view, solidarity is what’s desperately needed right now.

“We need to support each other in this fight,” she said. “If it’s just your union supporting your thing, you don’t have as much clout as you can get from all unions saying ‘if you attack one of us, you attack us all.’”

Beckert says she’ll happily join any rally in support of sister unions; she hopes other unions will join us if we ever have to fight for our rights. One of those looming fights could be over pensions.

During the event, the PSAC submitted an emergency resolution regarding pensions. According to the PSAC, “the government wants to provide significant incentives to employers to get rid of the much better defined benefit plans and convert these to targeted pension plans.”

This would undoubtedly inject some instability into retirement income – income already paid for through pension contributions!

But the convention wasn’t all doom and gloom; Beckert says she was pleasantly surprised to find out that leaders of Quebec’s student movement were now actively involved in the labour movement.

“Some of the student leaders are now in the workplace,” she explained. “Several of them were at the CLC convention; they’re very active as unionists and they’re working with us. Their activism didn’t end with the fight to over tuition fees.”

So if anyone ever asks what happened to those students, now you know: they’re with us!

May 18 – International Museum Day

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May 18 is International Museum Day; so, you may wish to plan a visit to a museum near you this weekend! Our nation is home to some very spectacular museums; for a great number of our members, it’s also where they work!

But our museums haven’t been immune from budget cuts in the name of austerity. The members who work in that sector are grappling with some unique challenges.

“Most people who work within museums, galleries and archives would much prefer to have funding agencies at arm’s length,” explained Terry Quinlan, professor of conservation at Algonquin College, in Ottawa. The college has the oldest-running museum studies program in Canada, with 40 years in operation.

Our national museums have the all-important task of collecting, researching, interpreting and preserving items of cultural significance – items that we all own, collectively. Meanwhile, the federal government has a legal obligation, under the Museum Act, to provide the means for these institutions to perform that work.

“That’s a fundamental core requirement of public institutions; the federal government must supply them with the funds to achieve their mandate.”

Increasingly, however, museums are rubbing shoulders with corporations to meet their fiduciary responsibilities. Quinlan points to Barrick Gold’s $1M sponsorship of the Canadian Museum of Nature as a troubling example of this trend. He calls the increasing amount of corporate influence “frightening”.

Despite the new source of funding, however, there’s still a disturbing amount of cost-cutting happening in national museums and historic sites.

“Across the country, we’ve seen pretty major slashes,” explained Quinlan. “If you take a look at Parks Canada, many people are unaware that Parks had service centres across Canada that cared for our collective cultural artifacts from all our national historic sites.”

The government shut them down; there’s only one facility left in Ottawa. According to Quinlan, even that facility’s operations have been scaled back; they used to have about 20 conservators – they’re down to about 7.

While the preservation side of things is taking a hit, so is these institutions’ capacity to really engage and educate visitors. Sadly, 26 historic sites lost the interpretive guides that make history come alive – that make learning more engaging. On Parks Canada’s 2012 list of national historic sites moving to the “self-guided” format, Laurier House was twelfth on the list.

“We have been partnering with Laurier House for 15 years,” said the conservation professor. “I’ve watched those guys get beaten up something fierce in the last six years. It’s an exceptional site, there’s plenty to interpret, tons to share with the public, and they’ve completely scaled it back.”

Professor Quinlan says there’s a push to do tours of the site through an app.

“It’s completely bizarre,” he added. “I think that some divisions of the federal government are quick to jump onto technology and suggest that because it’s a cheaper way of doing things, it’s a better way of doing things.”

“I don’t buy that. Give it five years, you’ll see.”

But if you can’t engage people through the internet, you have to get them in the door. Quinlan says many museums are trying innovative ways to reach people outside their typical audience.

“One of the bigger challenges – and a lot of institutions are trying to do this now – is to capture that middle-of-the-road demographic,” he explained. “People between the age of 20 and 35 – they’re trying to get them engaged in learning about their collective cultural past. They’re trying contemporary technology to do that; they’re trying innovative ways to do that.”

According to him, the Canadian Museum of Nature’s Nature Nocturne series are a great example of trying to reach that demographic. The museum describes its late-night events as “a chance for adults to play and enjoy the museum on their own terms.” All the galleries are open to visit, but there’s the added bonus of music, food and drink… and a dance floor!

“The Royal Ontario Museum is doing something very similar to that,” added Quinlan. “Who knows how successful those things are going to be; they’re just starting now.”

“I think it’s great. I think that if you try to remain the institution of the past, you’re not going to survive. It’s just not going to happen.”

May 17 – Int’l Day Against Homophobia & Transphobia

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by Kate Hart

Since 2005, May 17 has been dedicated to the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia. The date marks the day in 1990 when the World Health Organization removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders.

It was originally called the International Day Against Homophobia; a day intended to broaden awareness of the discrimination, violence and persecution experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex people around the world.

In 2009, following increased recognition that trans communities experienced aggravated forms of gender-based violence with distinct patterns different from homophobia, the name evolved to its current form: the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

In just a decade, this movement has spread worldwide; there are events are taking place in over 120 countries this year.

Wonderful work – but we have miles to go before we sleep. Being LGBT is still illegal in over 80 countries.

Can you even imagine what it would be like for your very existence to be declared illegal? Something you have no control over – just for being born that way, you are illegal.

This is a daily reality for the LGBT community in those countries, which represent over 40% of the world’s population.

How about sitting on death row because you dared to love? Ten countries still consider being LGBT a crime punishable by death! For daring to love. For daring to express that love for another human being.

Somehow, I suspect that this wouldn’t stand if the persecution was of heterosexual people; I’m certain that governments of the world would see this as a much bigger problem.

So, here is my challenge to all of you: get off your butts and help change this deplorable situation. Start lobbying your MPs to tie foreign aid funding to human rights. Start a letter campaign to every MP in this country telling them this is unacceptable – that we, as Canadians, should be leading the world on human rights issues like this. Join the rallies and celebrations of this day in your community and show your support.

Help stop the hate.

Help end the killing and persecution of a segment of society whose only crime was being born the way they are.

Kate Hart is the Union of National Employees’ national equity representative for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. This article was written as part of our union’s member journalism program. If you’d like to find out more, click here – to pitch a story or for any questions, please send an email to communications@une-sen.org.