Ready? Set. Go!

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Our servers were humming a little louder today as hundreds of delegate confirmation letters zipped their way into the cybersphere. (We would have gone with those owls from Harry Potter, but email is faster.)

If you are one of our lucky delegates, this is your time to shine; we have two tasks for you to complete in a timely manner.

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Assuming you’ve received your delegate letter (and have carefully read it!), you’ll need to walk on over to your manager’s office and get your leave form approved.

Your next trip will be to this newfanged thing called the fax machine. We need a copy of your approved leave form before we can approve your travel. You can fax the document to us at 613-560-4208. If you’re a little more tech-savvy, you can email your leave form to Suzanne Boucher.

At this point, you’re all set to book your travel. All flights and train journeys need to be booked with our friends at WE Travel. You can contact their Ottawa office at 1‑888‑663‑6685 or their Vancouver office at 1‑800‑663‑4703. You’ll find all the nitty-gritty details about your travel dates in your delegate letter.

If you do all of this before June 1, we’ll enter you in our draw for a mystery prize! (Insert dramatic music here). That’s all the more reason to complete these three steps as soon as possible!

National Executive Meeting – May 29–31

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The National Executive will meet in Ottawa from May 29 to 31, before convention committee meetings. The first session will start at 9 a.m. at the Minto Suites Hotel.

If your Local wishes to place an item on the agenda, please contact your Regional Vice-President and provide him or her with clear and concise information. He or she will gladly bring your item before the executive.

About the National Executive:
The National Executive is responsible for the policies, programs and direction of the Union of National Employees. Between conventions, it makes important decisions and creates policies that help look after our union. The executive also carries out resolutions adopted by the members during the last convention. Its members meets three times per year to review the union’s activities and ensure that they reflect the will of the membership.

Raising the bars

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The pride flag will be flown above the Gaspé town hall this month, thanks to the actions of one dedicated human rights activist.

Géraldine Fortin, our human rights representative for the Quebec region, approached her town’s mayor last week to convince him to recognize May 17: the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

“I didn’t have to do a lot of convincing,” admits Fortin. “I had all my arguments ready – I didn’t need to use any.”

“It went really well. They were very open to the idea.”

This won’t be the first time that the town of Gaspé will make a statement in favour of free expression. During the most recent winter Olympics, Gapsé’s city hall was among countless others across the country that flew the pride flag in opposition to Russia’s draconian anti-gay laws.

For a town of just over 15,000 people, it’s a very powerful statement.

“It sends a message about openness to diversity,” says Fortin.

But this time, a UNE member will be the one hoisting the flag. That’s right; the mayor is delegating the honour to Fortin.

“I’m going to wear a shirt sporting the UNE logo,” said Fortin, proudly.

With May 17 fast approaching, Fortin is daring other members to do something similar in their communities.

“I’m sure there are similar actions that can be done,” said Fortin. “I’m sure I’m not the only one who lives in a small community.”

If you take up Géraldine Fortin’s challenge, please let us know by sending us an email.

In this photo: Daniel Côté, Gaspé mayor; Manon Minville, Local 10040; and Géraldine Fortin, human rights representative, Quebec.
In this photo: Daniel Côté, Gaspé mayor; Manon Minville, Local 10040; and Géraldine Fortin, human rights representative, Quebec.

May Day

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On May 4, 1886, a peaceful protest by labour activists in Chicago suddenly turned violent. A bomb was thrown. The police reacted by firing indiscriminately into the crowd. At the end of the day, the death toll included seven policemen and four workers; only one death was linked to the bomb.

According to the late historian William J. Adelman, the Chicago Haymarket Affair is the most influential event in labour history. Alderman believed that few textbooks bother to thoroughly explain the incident – and many leave out crucial facts.

“The real issues of the Haymarket Affair were freedom of speech, freedom of the press, the right to free assembly, the right to a fair trial by a jury of peers and the right of workers to organize and fight for things like the eight-hour day,” wrote Adelman.

A few days earlier, on May 1, 80,000 workers had been demonstrating for eight-hour workdays; something that was already law for federal and state workers, but that was ignored by employers. According to Adelman, employees were forced to sign waivers of the law as a condition of employment.

The next day, 35,000 peaceful protesters showed up. But on May 3, Chicago police began to attack picketing workers. In response, a protest was held on May 4. Adelman notes that this protest had been approved by the city’s mayor – something that’s often overlooked. In fact, the pro-union mayor had been in attendance.

The Haymarket meeting was almost over and only about two hundred people remained when they were attacked by 176 policemen carrying Winchester repeater rifles. […] Then someone, unknown to this day, threw the first dynamite bomb ever used in peacetime history of the United States. The police panicked, and in the darkness many shot at their own men. Eventually, seven policemen died, only one directly accountable to the bomb. Four workers were also killed, but few textbooks bother to mention this fact.”

The events that followed are even more mind-boggling. Martial law was declared across the nation; the calamity was used as an excuse to crush the labour movement.

Eight men, “representing a cross section of the labor movement”, would be tried and convicted. Seven were sentenced to hang; one received a 15-year sentence.

Among those sentenced to death was Louis Ling; a 21 year-old carpenter who stood accused of throwing the bomb, despite having an alibi placing him over a mile away when the bomb went off.

“The judge himself was forced to admit that the state’s attorney had not been able to connect me with the bomb-throwing,” said Lingg in his final speech. “The latter knows how to get around it, however. He charges me with being a ‘conspirator’. How does he prove it? Simply by declaring [an international anarchist political organization] to be a ‘conspiracy’. I was a member of that body, so he has the charge securely fastened on me. Excellent! Nothing is too difficult for the genius of a state’s attorney!”

Ling was later found dead in his cell, having committed suicide the day before his scheduled execution.

Oscar Neebe, the accused who received the 15-year jail sentence, famously told the court that he was sorry not to be hung – that he would rather die suddenly than be killed slowly for a crime he didn’t commit.

“They found a revolver in my house, and a red flag there,” said Neebe after receiving his sentence. “I organized trade unions. I was for reduction of the hours of labor, and the education of laboring men, and the re-establishment of the Arbeiter-Zeitung—the workingmen’s newspaper. There is no evidence to show that I was connected with the bomb-throwing, or that I was near it, or anything of that kind.”

Seven years would pass.

Shortly after taking office in 1893, Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld issued pardons for Neebe and two other men whose sentences had been commuted to life imprisonment.

In his reasons for pardoning, Altgeld didn’t mince words. He asserted that the jury had been carefully selected in favour of conviction, that the defendants had not been proven guilty of the crimes for which they were charged and that the judge did not grant a fair trial.

Altgeld concluded that there was no conspiracy to commit murder: “if the theory of the prosecution were correct, there would have been many bombs thrown; and the fact that only one was thrown shows that it was an act of personal revenge.”

The governor placed the blame squarely on Police Captain John Bonfield, a man who “could not resist the temptation to have some more people clubbed” as soon as he heard the mayor had left the gathering.

He noted that the meeting was over; that the crowd was already dispersing.

“Had the police remained away for twenty minutes more, there would have been nobody left there.”

“Capt. Bonfield is the man who is really responsible for the death of the police officers.”

Altgeld also noted that much of the evidence presented at trial had been fabricated. He accused some overzealous police officials of terrorizing “ignorant men by throwing them into prison and threatening them with torture if they refused to swear to anything desired.”

The same police officers were said to have offered money and employment to those who would agree to commit perjury.

In July 1889, an American delegate at a labour conference in Paris asked that May 1 be declared International Labor Day in memory of the men who lost their lives because of the Haymarket Affair. Today, more than 80 countries celebrate International Workers’ Day on May 1.

But, in the United States, it’s not the official holiday recognizing the labour movement.

In 1894, after stifling a railroad strike, President Grover Cleveland was trying to score some points with the union folks. That’s when he decided to dedicate a federal holiday “in honour of the working man”.

But President Cleveland didn’t choose May 1; he was worried that it “would encourage rabble-rousing in commemoration of the Haymarket Riot.”

Big Steve (as some used to call the president) chose instead the first Monday of September; a day that Canadians had been celebrating as their Labour Day, in commemoration of the Toronto Typographical Union’s strike for a nine-hour workday.

 

 

Asian Heritage Month

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When we wrote about Asian Heritage Month last year, we focused on the difficulties faced by Chinese immigrants between confederation and the early 1920s. But the end of the Chinese Head Tax didn’t mark the end of discriminatory policies.

Japanese immigrants began arriving in Canada in the 1870s in search of a better life. Like their Chinese counterparts, they had to contend with fervently anti-Asian attitudes in British Columbia.

But those attitudes grew even worse during World War 2. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour on December 7, 1941, Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King declared war on Imperial Japan.

Only days later, 1,975 Canadian soldiers surrendered to the Japanese during the Battle of Hong Kong. Reports of murder, cruelty and starvation of these prisoners of war “increased the fear and hatred of Canadians for their Japanese-Canadian neighbours.”1

“Of the more than 23,000 [Japanese immigrants] in Canada at the time, over 75 per cent were Canadian Citizens. All were designated enemy aliens by government regulations.”2

It wouldn’t take long before the government mandated that all Japanese immigrants, whether naturalized citizens or Canadian-born, had to register with the Registrar of Enemy Aliens.

On January 14, 1942, Prime Minister Mackenzie King declared a large portion of the Pacific coast a “protected area”. First, a curfew was imposed requiring every person of the Japanese race to home after sunset and stay there until sunrise. If you lived in the protected area, you weren’t permitted to use or own a motor vehicle, a camera or a radio. 3

Within a few months, the government began to forcibly remove Japanese men from the protected area.

Japanese Canadians were told to pack a single suitcase each and taken to holding areas, to wait for trains to take them inland. Vancouver’s Hastings Park was one of areas where families waited, sometimes for months, to be relocated.”

More than 20,000 Japanese were moved to remote areas of British-Columbia. The majority of those displaced were actually born Canadian citizens. A year later, all their possessions that had been seized by the federal government were liquidated.

Even at the end of the war, King continued to bow to the most strident demands of the politicians. He offered the Japanese two choices: go back to Japan or disperse ‘east of the Rockies’.”

Many men were taken from their families and sent to work in road camps in Ontario and near the border between Alberta and British Columbia – while their wives and children were sent to camps. Families who wanted to remain together went Eastward, to Alberta and Manitoba, where they often performed back-breaking work on sugar beet farms.

In her book, Japanese Canadian Journey: the Nakagama Story, Dr. Rochelle Sato-Yamagishi writes about her family’s experience. After been uprooted from Steveston, British Columbia, her father moved to Lethbridge, Alberta, where he opened the first Albertan Japanese food store.4

“Similar to all the evacuees to Alberta, my father and mother endured great hardship, but characteristic of Japanese Canadians as a whole, I am struck with how they turned adversity into opportunity. They focused on getting through each day, hoping for a better life, and seemed to never allow their dream to be stolen from them.” 5

“I am most impressed by the fact that, despite having lost so much in Steveston, they never became bitter, as they established a new home in southern Alberta.”6

 


[1] Hickman, P. and Fukawa, M. (2011). Righting Canada’s Wrongs: Japanese Canadian Internment in the Second World War. Toronto, ON: James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers..

[2] Idem

[3] Idem

[4] Yamagishi, N. R. (2010) Japanese Canadian Journey: The Nakagama Story. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford.

[5] Idem

[6] Idem

National Day of Mourning – April 28

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As labour activists, perhaps our most important work revolves around workplace safety. Each year, far too many workers succumb to fatal injuries or occupational diseases.

Unfortunately for many Albertan families, 2013 was a disastrous year for workplace fatalities. According to the Calgary Herald, occupational diseases nearly doubled, accounting for the dramatic increase.

Alberta’s booming industries come with a heavy share of health hazards: 99 workers lost their lives in 2013 due to lung diseases. For coal workers, black lung disease is a common culprit. Other workers who are exposed to asbestos run a great risk of developing asbesotis and mesothelioma.

But you don’t have to work in a coal mine to come into contact with hazardous materials.

“Our members still work in government buildings that have elements of asbestos,” explained Regional Vice-President Kevin King. “There’s a ban in Saskatchewan, but they still exist in federal buildings in Alberta.”

And of course, many of our members work outdoors, in national parks and historic sites across the country. King says outdoor elements bring their own hazards into the mix.

“Inside national parks, we have issues with how trees are felled. We also have issues with respect to the operation of chainsaws and other equipment.”

Given how badly Parks Canada was hit during the 2012 cuts, King is worried about how a lack of resources could affect the basic maintenance of potentially dangerous equipment.

“We’re still expected to serve members of the public, but by and large, it’s questionable whether there’s enough time to perform maintenance on these things.”

The recent changes to the Canada Labour Code are also top of mind for the union leader. As you may recall, Bill C-4 robbed health and safety inspectors of their enforcement powers and handed them over to the minister of labour.

The government maintains that health and safety officers will continue to enforce the Canada Labour Code.

“There’s no enforcement until there’s an incident,” explained King.

“It seems to me that it’s changed. And we’ve gone backwards a generation or two.

Top 5 questions about convention

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We interrupt this regularly scheduled internet programming for some news about convention!

Recently, we compiled a list of the top 5 questions our members are asking about convention. The following are answers to these questions:

How do I make my travel arrangements?
After you’ve received your delegate confirmation letter (coming soon!) – and after you’ve faxed us your approved leave form – you can contact WE Travel to book your flight. You can contact their Ottawa office at 1‑888‑663‑6685 or their Vancouver office at 1‑800‑663‑4703. When booking your flight, you must provide them with the following promotional code: EX47RV71.

Your delegate confirmation letter will include further instructions about completing your travel reservation – stay tuned!

Who reserves my hotel room?
That would be your friendly neighbour administrative staff at the UNE. So, you’re off the hook for your hotel reservation; but it’s up to you to book your flight!

Can I stay a few days before or after convention at my own expense?
Yes, absolutely – you can even stay in the same hotel. Just make sure to inform us of your travel plans.

When can I go ahead and book my flight?
As soon as you’ve received your delegate confirmation letter (it’s coming soon, we promise!) and after you’ve faxed us your approved leave form. Best of all, if you book before June 1, you’ll automatically be entered into a draw for a mystery prize!

Will the UNE launch an artificial sun into space to guarantee sunny weather during convention?
Although the UNE fully endorses sunny weather, an endeavor of this kind would have to be presented as a resolution and approved by a majority of members at convention. In the meantime, all members of the UNE staff are feverishly sending positive thoughts into the cosmos to banish rainy weather for the week.

Do you have a question that isn’t answered here? That’s why we have a great FAQ in the convention section of our website!

BE LIKE DIANE!

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When Diane McDougall, a member of Local 70130, sees a post from us appear on her Facebook newsfeed, she hits “Like”. If you take a peek at our Facebook page right now, you’ll notice Diane likes a ton of our stuff!

Maybe Diane really gets a kick out of our content (we hope so!), maybe she’s just really nice and generous with those “likes” (we know her to be an especially nice person!); either way, it really helps us out.

Recently, our ability to reach our members via Facebook has taken a bit of a dip. We’re not the only ones; Ignite Social Media, who recently studied 21 brand pages, calculated an average drop of 44% in those pages’ reach. Our own analysis shows the UNE page’s reach dropped 45%.

Even some one of the internet’s largest sites, Upworthy, saw its social media-driven traffic decline by 46%.

What’s going on? First, there was a recent change in how the site determines what content should be placed on your newsfeed. Additionally, Facebook claims there’s just more content competing for your newsfeed these days… but if we’d like to send it some money, they’d be happy to help us out with that, thankyouverymuch. In other words, we can start paying to appear on your newsfeeds or suffer the dip.

What does this mean for you? Our posts may or may not show up on your Facebook news feed anymore. And that royally sucks. We’ve always been a huge fan of using Facebook to bring you our latest news… (but we’re not giving up on it just yet!).

It’s not all sad and dismal: there are things you can do to help!

First: Be Like Diane! That’s right; when you see our posts, “like” them. You can also share them or comment on them. The more our members interact with our content, the more Facebook’s algorithm understands that we produce “good” content, which increases the likelihood that our posts will appear on your newsfeed in the future.

Second, you can visit our Facebook page once in a while. That tends to tell the Facebook algorithm that you like our news and need to see more of it.

Third, since you’re clearly a die-hard UNE fan, you can ask Facebook to notify you each time we post. This is the best way to make sure you don’t miss a beat! We rarely post more than 3-4 times a week, so you shouldn’t get inundated with notifications! To do this:

  1. Go to our Facebook page.
  2. Hover over the “Liked” button
  3. Click “Get notifications”

You’ll now get a notification each time we post something, the same way you do when someone likes your newest selfie. 😉

Earth Day

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Last time we reported on Earth Day, we shared a few tips for how you can green things around the office. (Thanks to the magic of technology, you can still access that article.)

Speaking of technology… do you have some old technological relic from the past collecting dust in your home? Apparently, 80% of Canadians are hoarding some sort of electronic device that’s well past its prime.

…It might be time to recycle your old Betamax recorder.

This Earth Day, the Electronic Products Recycling Association, an industry-led not-for-profit organization, is urging Canadians to recycle their electronics.

Since 2007, the EPRA has kept more than 400,000 metric tons of electronics from ending up in landfills across the country – roughly the weight of 80,000 elephants! This is especially good news when you consider that electronics that end up in incinerators have a nasty habit of releasing tons of harmful chemicals into the air.

When electronics are recycled properly, glass, plastics and precious metals are harvested – all while ensuring that toxic chemicals, such as mercury and led, are handled in a responsible fashion.

Even if you’re not a tree-hugger, you want to make sure your electronics are responsibly disposed.

To find an EPRA drop-off centre near you, please visit their website.

Another great seminar in the NCR

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Has it been three years already? Last weekend marked the end of a successful round of regional seminars held across the country. It was the NCR-Treasury Board region that got honour of hosting the last regional seminar before convention. (don’t hyperventilate… but convention is coming FAST!)

With so much happening on Parliament Hill these days, members weren’t scratching their heads searching for discussion topics. But, according to Regional Vice-President Richard Ballance, scary House bills aren’t top of mind for the average member.

“Our members are encountering a lot of issues with performance management agreements – in how they’re implemented,” explained Ballance.

Tony Clement’s recent comments have many members fearing that performance appraisals are going to become a gateway for disciplinary measures.

Ballance said another issue punctuating workplaces centers on sick leave; managers are increasingly demanding a doctor’s note when people fall ill. Typically, a medical note is only requested when an employee’s absence spans three days or longer.

“More and more, managers are asking for notes on any illness,” he explained. “Especially if they see you as a problem employee.”

The collective agreements we hold with Treasury Board allow for managers to request a doctor’s letter; there’s nothing prohibiting them from doing so, even if the absence was only a day or two.

Ballance is also concerned that this new trend is putting further stress on an already underfunded health-care system.

“And many walk-in clinics charge for these letters; our members are paying out of pocket for that.”

Much like the recent NCR-Separate Employers’ regional seminar, a workshop on resolutions got rave reviews. Anyone going to convention can, we’re told, look forward to “several” resolutions that were written during this seminar.

Finally, you’ll be happy to hear that the UNE got props from the PSAC’s own Chris Aylward for having a provision that sends youth delegates to our conventions. During each regional seminar, young members caucus and elect two of their peers as youth delegates to convention.

Karine Oluyole and Georgina Smith were elected last weekend; they join 18 other youth delegates who will represent their peers at our upcoming convention.