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Organized Labour in Canada

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... production = decrease in jobs. Labour-intensive jobs replaced by technology. ... Many people work part time ( 30 hrs) so company does not have to pay benefits ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Organized Labour in Canada


1
Organized Labour in Canada
  • March 25th, 2009

2
Labour Force
  • Any person who has a job or is actively seeking
    work.
  • As of 2005 Canadian labour force was 17,370,000.
  • People who are not actively seeking work are
    called unemployed.

3
Reasons for Unemployment
  • Laid Off
  • Lazy
  • Recession
  • Dont need a job
  • Retired
  • Disability
  • Lack of education
  • Specialized Training

4
Job Market Changes
  • Increase in automation decrease in jobs
  • Decreased demand decreased production
    decrease in jobs
  • Labour-intensive jobs replaced by technology.
  • Low paying jobs (i.e. fast food) have taken their
    place.

5
Job Market Changes
  • Many people work part time (lt 30 hrs) so company
    does not have to pay benefits that are legally
    required for full time employees.
  • Labour legislation (laws) regulate minimum pay,
    hours of work, breaks, overtime, reasons for
    firing/dismissal, parental leave.

6
Labour Unions
  • Groups of people who work in similar jobs or
    businesses, and attempt to obtain fair wages and
    better working conditions for their members.
  • E.g. CAW, NSTU, NSGEU, CUPE
  • Organized at local, provincial, and federal
    levels.
  • Local unions can include police officers,
    firefighters, or bus drivers.

7
Labour Unions
  • Provincial unions include the whole province.
  • National unions include the smaller provincial
    unions (HQs are usually in a large city)

8
Collective Bargaining
  • Process in which employees contract demands are
    negotiated with management through elected
    representatives of a labour union.
  • Union reps present a list of demands to the
    employer who agrees, reject, suggest a compromise.

9
Collective Bargaining
  • Lengthy Process
  • When finished formal document that outlines the
    conditions is called a collective agreement.

10
Items in a Collective Agreement
  • Wages/Salary, Overtime Pay
  • Work Hours
  • Benefits may include medical, dental, parental
    leave, vacation, sick days, breaks, and
    retirement
  • COLA Cost of Living Allowance adjusts wages
    as cost of living increases.
  • Job Security prevents firing or being laid off
    unjustly form a grievance committee to hear
    unfair employment practices.
  • Working Conditions safety of working
    environment
  • Seniority length of time employee has worked
    for company. If people must be laid off new hires
    will go first.

11
What If It All Fails?
  • Strike work stoppage by employees legal
    strikes occur after existing collective agreement
    expires, illegal strikes occur if collective
    agreement is still in place when employees
    walk-out before the contract expires.
  • Strikes can ended by members voting to end the
    strike or government legislates them back to
    work.
  • During strike, employees suffer no consistent
    wage (strike pay)

12
Political Lobbyists
  • Local strikes often dont have the major effect
    that a national strike would, and national
    strikes are unpopular among citizens.
  • Labour groups create a political lobby group to
    focus on convincing politicians of the need for
    changes to the legislation.
  • Lobbyists have been responsible for minimum
    wages, age limit on hiring of young people and
    improved safety standards.

13
Essential Services
  • Police officers, firefighters, nurses, etc. are
    deemed essential services not allowed to
    strike.
  • Work-to-rule campaigns are used instead of a
    strike.
  • Involves strictly following working hours and not
    performing additional or voluntary duties.
  • Workers may also enact a work slowdown to
    decrease productivity or efficiency.
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