Reminder- wear black tomorrow!

May 19th day of action.  Hang your PSAC flag and wear black tomorrow (Tuesday)!

It’ s that time again

It ‘s almost the 19th again and Julie and Jackie have been hard at work distributing PSAC  flags@  457 Richmond St. Please hang them up for Tuesday if you have not already. Also,  try to remember to wear black Tuesday to show our solidarity and support for our bargaining team. We know it’ s hard to remember after the long weekend but we will try to post a reminder.  It is important and I think we will have a very visual statement this month!  These little actions get reported right up to Treasury board.
Let’ s try for a picture out front on afternoon break –  2pm.
If anyone from our smaller offices is interested in getting flags to display,  let us know. You can email localceiu581@gmail.com to contact the local exec team.

Robyn Benson re-elected PSAC National President

Robyn Benson was re-elected as the National President of the Public Service Alliance of Canada this morning at the PSAC’s 17th National Triennial Convention. Benson was first elected as PSAC president in 2012 and previously served as the Regional Executive Vice-President (REVP) for the PSAC Prairie Region since 2000. In accepting the new mandate, Benson thanked the delegates for their support. “It will be an honour and a privilege to serve our members for the next three years.” Benson has always been and continues to be an advocate for human rights, social justice and strong public services, and is vehemently opposed to public service cuts. She has made it her mission to defend the collective bargaining rights of PSAC members and all workers in Canada. “We will work for change on October 19,” said Benson. She pledges to continue to work with others to win social justice and equality for all.

 

April 30, 2015

Questions re: designations

If you have questions regarding the upcoming designations, (essential services) please email them to us @ localceiu581@gmail.com

We will gather questions, do some research and plan an information session in the near future.

Thank you.

CEIU Local 581 exec team

 

Postal workers union says sick leave reform didn’t work for them

By Julie Ireton, CBC News Posted: Apr 29, 2015 10:52 AM ETLast Updated: Apr 29, 2015 10:52 AM ET

Denis Lemelin, president of the union representing Canadian postal workers, says the new sick leave system for postal workers has led to people coming in to work sick.

Denis Lemelin, president of the union representing Canadian postal workers, says the new sick leave system for postal workers has led to people coming in to work sick. (Julie Ireton/BC)

The head of the union representing postal workers says the federal government’s plan to modernize sick leave for public servants sounds like déjà vu.

Denis Lemelin, president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, said the relatively new sick leave system at Canada Post hasn’t worked out for his members or the workplace.

“It changed a lot of things,” said Lemelin. “It’s the fact that it’s personal days and what is happening is people are coming to work sick, so that’s the reality.”

Canada Post negotiated a new sick leave policy that was implemented in 2013 after a labour dispute, during which sick leave was one of the key issues.

CUPW members went from being allowed 15 sick days a year to the current system of five personal days, Lemelin said.

Once those five days are used up, postal workers must then apply to an insurance company for short term disability.

Sick leave big issue in current negotiations

Right now, the federal government and public sector unions are at odds over a new sick leave policy for public sector workers. In last week’s budget, the government said it could save more than $1 billion by scrapping the current sick leave regime

Robyn Benson, president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, says the new Canada Post sick leave plan is a cautionary tale for her members.

But public sector unions have vowed to fight the cut.

Robyn Benson, president of the union representing the largest number of federal workers, the Public Service Alliance of Canada, said the Canada Post example is a cautionary tale for her members. 

“At Canada Post for example, they get X amount of days … but if you don’t have those you go on leave without pay,” said Benson. “It’s certainly not management now trying to ensure that their employees are healthy. This is an insurance company saying, oh, you must come back to work. I think, on so many levels, it’s just wrong.”

The insurance company that runs the short-term disability program for Canada Post is Morneau Shepell. When the federal government initially announced it would revamp the sick leave system, Morneau Shepell sent out a media release praising the initiative.

“We applaud the Government of Canada for taking a much-needed step to modernize its human resources practices,” stated the news release from June 2013. 

‘I’m here for the public servant who wants to work hard …,’ Treasury Board president says

Officials at the Treasury Board would not say how much a public service new sick leave system will cost to implement.

“I’m here for the public servant who wants to work hard, who needs sick benefits when they are truly sick … but I’m also for accountability … on behalf of the taxpayer,” said Treasury Board President Tony Clement last Wednesday in a scrum with the press.

Canada Post said its revamped sick leave plan was “part of a long-term strategic initiative to align costs with our competitors” and was drawn from industry best practices.

But officials there would not say if any savings have been realized.

“This information is commercially sensitive and therefore not public,” Canada Post stated in a note to CBC News.

Emergency PSAC Resolution – Ottawa Citizen article

national-president-of-the-public-service-alliance-of-canadaPSAC convention: The showdown over sick leave begins

Kathryn May, Ottawa Citizen
More from Kathryn May, Ottawa Citizen Published on: April 26, 2015
Last Updated: April 26, 2015 10:09 PM EDT ​
Public Service Alliance of Canada president Robyn Benson says the government has gone too far, and its plan to bring in a new short-term disability plan whether a deal is negotiated or not is the ‘straw that broke the camel’s back.’

Graeme Murphy / Ottawa Citizen ​Share
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Print The largest union representing workers in Canada’s non-partisan public service is appealing to its members to defeat the Conservatives in the upcoming election as part of a sweeping emergency resolution to “beat back” the government’s attack on collective bargaining rights and sick leave benefits.

More than 700 delegates are gathered in Quebec City this week for the Public Service Alliance of Canada’s triennial convention. The dominant issue will be an emergency resolution drafted after the government booked a one-time $900-million savings in last week’s budget to replace public servants existing sick leave benefits with a new short-term disability plan even though contract negotiations are still underway.

“It is time to get every PSAC member to vote to rid Canada of the Conservatives once and for all,” PSAC president Robyn Benson said in an opening speech to the delegates.

“Never has political action been more important. We’ve had enough of the attack on labour rights and on equality groups.”

AdvertisementPSAC is the most political and militant of the 17 federal unions and has crossed the line for some public servants, such as when several of its locals endorsed separatist candidates in the 2006 election. But this is the first time the union’s national leadership has pointedly told members to help defeat the government.

Federal employees must carefully balance their obligations as public servants — to be loyal and politically impartial — with their constitutional right to participate in political activities.

Benson, who is seeking a second uncontested term as PSAC’s president, said she has never told members how to vote. In the last election, she said, the union urged members to get out and vote while reminding them of the Conservatives’ track record on public services.

This time, she said, the government went too far, and its plan to bring in a new short-term disability plan whether a deal is negotiated or not is the “straw that broke the camel’s back.

“We are saying enough is enough. We have to defeat this government,” she said in an interview.

In her speech, Benson rhymed off the Conservative policies she said were widening the inequality gap, stretching public services to the breaking point, and trampling all workers’ collective bargaining rights. The message was clear: the attack on public servants’ benefits and collective bargaining rights is part of the government’s assault on public services to shrink the size of the state.

“Inequality … doesn’t just happen by accident,” she said. “It is the result of deliberate political choices by government. We can change those choices. We can change the government and that’s exactly what we are going to do.”

The weeklong convention promises to be a pivotal gathering of the giant union as it maps out a bargaining strategy when it returns to the table with the government’s new position.

At the top of the agenda is an emergency resolution the union’s board of directors unanimously passed on the weekend calling for the union to mobilize, organize, campaign and take legal action against the government. It will be debated Monday.

The resolution “condemns” the Conservative government for eroding unions’ bargaining power, flouting their constitutional right to collective bargaining, reducing public servants’ severance, pension, health care benefits, and now unilaterally taking aim at the 15 million days public servants have banked in paid sick leave.

Benson says the union won’t make concessions on sick leave. “If the Conservatives try to legislate any of our contracts before the next election, we’ll respond swiftly and effectively. We will not tolerate any interference in free collective bargaining.”

Sick leave is at the centre of the current round of collective bargaining that’s been underway for a year. The 17 unions are united in their refusal to give up the 15 days of bankable sick leave public servants now receive in exchange for a disability plan proposed by Treasury Board President Tony Clement. His proposal would limit paid sick days to six a year.

The unions are now under pressure to counter the government’s move, take action, or explain to Canadians why Clement’s proposal is unfair and doesn’t work. They have various legal options, such as taking the government to court or filing a complaint of bad-faith bargaining with the Public Service Labour Relations and Employment Board.

PSAC’s resolution also comes several days after the 17 federal unions met and reaffirmed the “solidarity pact” they signed a year ago to present a common front in this round of bargaining on sick leave. As the largest union, however, PSAC’s plan could signal that the other unions could take similar political action to “mobilize” and defeat the Conservative government.

The solidarity pact is an unlikely alliance of unions representing workers in very different jobs, from dock workers to doctors and prison guards to lawyers, but it has shown no cracks no far. Unlike PSAC, many of these unions have traditionally steered clear of militancy and any political activity that has even a whiff of partisanship.

One union official explained the solidarity pact was signed to ensure unity in opposing concessions on sick leave. The various unions have agreed to co-ordinate and work together on any advertising and political campaigns, but each is free to “do their own thing” and tailor their campaigns to what their members want.

The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada approved a similar strategy to PSAC’s at its annual meeting several months ago when delegates voted to “take all necessary” political action — short of becoming partisan — to defeat the government.

“We very much want a change in government,” said PIPSC president Debi Daviau. “Are we targeting Conservatives? … In strict partisan terms no, but we will be holding the Conservatives’ feet to the fire on the issues that are important to our members.”

PSAC’s proposed ‘emergency resolution’ for vote on Monday
WHEREAS the federal Conservative government has repeatedly adopted legislation undermining the rights, benefits, health and safety and collective agreements of PSAC members and all federal public sector workers; and

WHEREAS this government now intends to legislate changes to sick leave protection contained in collective agreements covering most PSAC members and other federal public sector workers; and

WHEREAS this government has already violated our constitutional right to collective bargaining through budget implementation legislation; therefore

BE IT RESOLVED THAT we, the PSAC, condemn the Conservative government for undermining the collective bargaining process and its intention to unilaterally take away our members’ negotiated sick leave benefits; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT we stand up and oppose any government actions that will compromise any of our members’ rights; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT we will continue to organize and mobilize our members through concerted and strategic actions with other unions to defend our bargaining rights; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT we will take the necessary legal action to defend our constitutional right to free collective bargaining; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT we will work to elect a federal government that respects worker and union rights and federal public services, and that governs for the benefit of all Canadian workers; and

BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED THAT we will not let this government or any future government intimidate us or take away our rights.

Reminder: Posters to send to Bargaining Team -Need more participation!

bargainposter
Hello everyone.
Can you please write something or at least sign your name to one of the posters I have placed around 457 Richmond Street:6th floor lunchroom
4th floor business centre
3rd floor lunchroom
2nd floor bulletin board
1st floor lunchroom

(I also sent posters to the smaller offices, so hopefully they were received and are up. Next time I will send postage to make it easier, but you can mail them in yourself and submit your expense claim or send back to me to mail in)

I want them to be full!The next discussion between our bargaining team and TB/employer is supposed to be happening in May. These posters will be displayed behind the table where the bargaining team actually sits. Let’s do our little part and contribute to a strong visual showing of solidarity of our members. I want to get them mailed in ASAP.

Thanks!
Sara JV