Over the last 30 years, the CCPA has provided alternative research and analysis that have been indispensable in exposing the corporate agenda. I don’t know what I’d have done without them.
— Judy Rebick
CCPA Senior Economist Armine Yalnizyan was among the witnesses who testified to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance as part of the committee’s ongoing study of income inequality. Armine discusses income inequality—giving us cause to consider what inaction could mean—and shares some recommendations on how the federal government can play an important role in offsetting growing income inequality and the problems it unleashes.
You can read the full transcript of Armine's presentation, here: Study of Income Inequality in Canada—What Can Be Done. You can also watch video of the hearing, here.
Sweeping changes to Saskatchewan’s labour relations and employment standards legislation are on the verge of being passed. Bill 85, the Saskatchewan Employment Act, will dramatically transform the laws governing trade unions and industrial relations in the province. The Saskatchewan Party government, led by Premier Brad Wall, insists that the changes will simply modernize and simplify a dozen pieces of existing legislation into a single, omnibus employment act. But workers and trade unions are justified in thinking otherwise. In 1998, Saskatchewan’s current Minister of the Economy, Bill Boyd, unsuccessfully attempted to pass Bill 218, “An Act respecting the Right to Work (RTW) in the Province of Saskatchewan”, while the Sask Party was in opposition. In fact, debates over right-to-work style reforms and union financial transparency have already been contested in Saskatchewan as Bill 85 developed. But why is Saskatchewan so important in the national context?
As the birthplace of public healthcare and the country’s first Bill of Rights, Saskatchewan has produced some of the most progressive legislation in Canada. With the passage of the Trade Union Act in 1944, the province became the first jurisdiction to grant public sector employees the right to unionize. According to Bob Sass, a leading architect of Saskatchewan’s modern health and safety legislation, the Act was seen as a “beacon” for labour unions elsewhere in Canada. Indeed, Saskatchewan has served as a beachhead for groundbreaking developments in industrial relations legislation and practice.
The historic Trade Union Act has been ignominiously reduced to Section 6 of the SEA, a document that channels over 900 pages of legislation into one, 184 page document. Supposedly the SEA was crafted in a four-month period between July and December of 2012, but rumours suggest that the legislation was drafted well before government consultations commenced in May of 2012. Premier Wall insists that the legislation will pass before summer, despite protest from trade unions and members of the public. The Sask Party has singled out and attacked organized labour, and their labour reforms will be remembered as the defining characteristic of Wall’s government.
Only months after winning the 2007 provincial election, the Saskatchewan Party introduced a series of changes to labour legislation, the most important of which was Bill 5 (Public Service Essential Services Act) and Bill 6 (Trade Union Amendment Act). Bill 5 provided public sector employers the power to deem certain services as essential, with no recourse for appeal by unions or employees. Workers in these categories cannot withhold their labour during a strike. Bill 6, meanwhile, ended the card check certification process and granted employers the right to communicate facts and opinions to workers during union campaigns. The Saskatchewan Federation of Labour quickly launched an appeal. In February of 2012, Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Denis Ball overturned Bill 5, but dismissed the SFL’s appeal against Bill 6. With regards to the PSESA, Ball’s conclusion was critical: that workers have a constitutional right to strike in order to bargaining collectively. The government appealed Ball’s ruling less than a month later.
Brad Wall’s “open for business” attitude is gazed upon with envious eyes across the country. After all, Saskatchewan’s economy has continued to grow despite the global economic slump. Some estimates even suggest that it will lead the country in wage growth throughout 2013. As the debate over Bill 85 draws to a close, it’s important for trade unions and workers to examine how Saskatchewan might serve as an example for reform in other jurisdictions. For Tim Hudak, the leader of Ontario’s PCs, Saskatchewan represents a beacon for economic and regulatory changes.
In 2011, the Ontario Tories released their white paper on labour law reform, “Paths to Prosperity: Flexible Labour Markets”. Ontario Tory leader Tim Hudak has used the paper as a foundation for his campaign to introduce right-to-work legislation, amongst other changes. Modernizing labour laws and workplace regulations, Hudak insists, will provide a cure for the economic malaise facing Ontario, particularly in its ailing manufacturing sector. As the report reads: “British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan have agreed to tear down rigid labour and regulatory barriers in a bid to create the most open and competitive economies in the country. So far, they are succeeding”.
It’s worth noting that the Sask Party backed away from challenging the dues check-off issue. Even before Bill 85, Don Morgan made it clear that the government was not going to embark on right-to-work style legislation, remarking that challenging the Rand Formula convention would likely end up at the Supreme Court – a battle he feared the government might lose. It is also the case that public opinion, trade unions, and even business lobby groups are opposed to challenging the dues check-off question. Indeed, Saskatchewan has already served as a litmus test for right-to-work.
Whether or not right-wing politicians will continue to draw inspiration from Saskatchewan on how to transform labour legislation remains to be seen. But the province has shown that public support for extreme anti-union measures, like right-to-work, is not as secure as business groups and their political allies anticipated. How the SEA will affect trade union influence and collective bargaining is also uncertain. And, unlike Hudak, Wall’s political strategy includes making progressive changes like indexing minimum wage to inflation and introducing stiffer penalties for health and safety violations. Nevertheless, the outcome of a comprehensive piece of employment standards legislation will be a useful test for both labour organizations and businesses elsewhere in Canada.
Another historical moment in Saskatchewan arrived on April 26, 2013, when the Court of Appeal overturned Justice Ball’s 2012 ruling. The court decided that the PSESA is constitutionally valid, and upheld the government’s strict regulations on the right of public sector workers to strike. The Saskatchewan Federation of Labour now has sixty days to apply for an appeal with the Supreme Court of Canada. Depending on how this struggle progresses, Saskatchewan might serve as a beachhead for critical developments in labour legislation and the rights of workers to strike.
Andrew Stevens is a faculty member at the University of Regina
and co-editor of rankandfile.ca.
The coming weeks will see women and men graduating in nearly equal numbers from schools across Canada. By the time those women and men reach their 30s, they will see the gap between their incomes and their share of paid work widen. This pattern will continue throughout their working lives. The women of the class of 2013 can look forward to lower rates of promotion at work, less stable work, and diminished retirement security. They will occupy less than a quarter of the senior leadership positions in the public and political sectors.
A new study, by CCPA research associate Kate McInturff, finds that Canada's progress in closing the gap between women and men in the areas of political and economic empowerment has slowed nearly to a standstill. Unless we do something differently, we won't be able to promise equality to the class of 2013 or any other graduating class for the next 228 years.
Read more about Canada's gender gap—and how we can close it—in the full report: Closing Canada’s Gender Gap: Year 2240 Here We Come!
The Globe and Mail has published a list of all Canadian companies authorized to use the Temporary Foreign Workers program. Companies on this list are not necessarily using TFWs, but the fact that the list is 475 pages long tells us something about the popularity of the program.
Join us in Ottawa Thursday, April 25 for a forum on the changing nature of federal budgets featuring former Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page.
Thursday, April 25th, 2013
9am to Noon
Sheraton Hotel, Penthouse suite, 17th floor, 150 Albert Street, Ottawa
9:00 am: Introductions (by David Macdonald, CCPA)
9:15am - 10:30am: Kevin Page, former Parliamentary Budget Officer
Speaking about his experience as Canada’s first Parliamentary Budget Officer, how he envisioned the new office, the challenges he faced, and the future of the PBO.
10:30am - 10:45am: Coffee break
10:45 – Noon: Panel discussion on Budget 2013: An evaluation of Budget 2013’s primary measures and how it addresses (or not) the big macro-economic challenges facing Canada.
Moderator: Althia Raj, Ottawa Bureau Chief, Huffington Post Canada
Panelists:
Event poster (click to view larger image):
Thursday, April 25th, 2013
9am to Noon
Sheraton Hotel, Penthouse suite, 17th floor, 150 Albert Street, Ottawa
Tickets are available for $20. Click here to purchase your ticket online. Tickets can also be purchased by phone at 613-563-1341 ext 312. There will be no tickets sold at the door.
9:00 am: Introductions (by David Macdonald, CCPA)
9:15am - 10:30am: Kevin Page, former Parliamentary Budget Officer
Speaking about his experience as Canada’s first Parliamentary Budget Officer, how he envisioned the new office, the challenges he faced, and the future of the PBO.
10:30am - 10:45am: Coffee break
10:45 – Noon: Panel discussion on Budget 2013: An evaluation of Budget 2013’s primary measures and how it addresses (or not) the big macro-economic challenges facing Canada.
Moderator: Althia Raj, Ottawa Bureau Chief, Huffington Post Canada
Panelists:
Over the last 30 years, the CCPA has provided alternative research and analysis that have been indispensable in exposing the corporate agenda. I don’t know what I’d have done without them.
— Judy Rebick