|
Union Update
September 13 - October 29, 2004
Acrobat format
In this issue:
Questions on negotiations
We have received a huge number of questions and comments about
negotiations and the votes that will be held among the membership.
As a result, we have decided to develop and publish a series of
Answers to commonly asked questions.
The information presented in this issue of the Union Update may
not answer all of your questions. That's why we encourage all PSAC
members to attend upcoming meetings to have specific questions addressed
and to vote on the tentative agreement or employer's final offer.
More information about these meetings will be available through
PSAC Regional Offices
within the next few weeks.
The Qs&As fall into four categories:
• Membership Votes: Process,
Access to Information
• Bargaining Process and Strike
Strategy
• Implementing the Results of the
Membership Votes
• The Vote No Campaign for Table
1 and Table 3
Membership Votes: Process, Access to Information
Which members are voting on a tentative agreement, and
which ones are voting on the employer's final offer?
What's the difference?
Members at Parks Canada, the CRA, the CFIA and Treasury Board Tables
2 and 5 are voting on tentative agreements. That's
because the negotiating teams for these groups reached tentative
agreements with the employer, and are recommending the agreements
to the membership.
Members at Tables 1 and 3 are voting on the employer's final offer.
That's because their negotiating teams unanimously
recommended that the members reject the employer's final offer.
This final offer is not a tentative agreement.
Who is eligible to vote on the tentative agreement or the
employer's last offer?
In order to vote, you must be a member in good standing of the
PSAC, and a member of the bargaining unit for which the vote is
being held.
Persons in the bargaining unit who have not signed a PSAC membership
card can do so at the meetings where the votes are held.
When will membership votes on tentative agreements and
the employer's last offer be scheduled?
Membership votes for Parks will be held November 19 – December
15, 2004. Membership votes for CRA will be held November 19 – December
8, 2004 .
Membership votes for Treasury Board Tables 1, 2, 3, 5, and CFIA
will be held December 6 – 17, 2004 , and resume January 3 - 26,
2005 .
We know that PSAC members want the opportunity to vote on their
tentative agreements or the employer's final offer as soon as possible.
And we assure you that we are scheduling meetings as soon as we
possibly can. However the process to prepare for and conduct membership
votes for seven separate bargaining units is extremely labour intensive.
To ensure that PSAC members are fully informed of the details of
the tentative agreement or employer's final offer, ratification
and information kits are being produced. This time, we have seven
kits to write, translate, format, provide in alternate formats where
required, print and distribute to Locals and Branches.
Staff at the PSAC Regional Offices will be consulting with Locals/Branches
to coordinate meeting logistics within the time frames provided
above. These meetings will provide members with an opportunity to
discuss the details of the tentative agreements or employer's final
offers and to have their specific questions or concerns addressed
by bargaining team members, Regional Executive Vice-Presidents and
or Component Presidents. Specific meeting dates will be available
through PSAC Regional Offices.
Organizing membership votes poses many challenges for our Union,
given our members are spread from coast to coast to coast, in large
urban centres to isolated posts. As well, we have members who work
outside of Canada, members who are shift workers, members who are
on ships, members who are seasonal workers and no longer employed
in the workplace, all of whom must be provided with information
on the details of the tentative agreement or employer's final offer
and be provided an opportunity to vote.
What information will we receive before the vote?
Bargaining unit-specific information bulletins, which include summaries
of the key issues, are available on the website. Once
the detailed voting kits are produced, these will also be posted
on the website as follows:
Parks Ratification Kit - November 5, 2004
CRA Ratification Kit - November 5, 2004
CFIA Ratification Kit - November 19, 2004
Tables 2 and 5 Ratification Kits - November 19, 2004
Tables 1 and 3 Information Kits - November 19, 2004
The information will also be available at the meetings called for
a membership vote on the tentative agreement or the employer's final
offer.
What is the process for voting? Where will
the voting take place?
The voting processes are covered by the PSAC Constitution and Regulation
15. The voting will take place at the
scheduled meetings in your area. The PSAC Regional
Offices will work with Locals and Branches to set up the membership
meetings where the votes will be conducted. The Regional
Offices will advise members of the time and location for all the
meetings within their regions.
Bargaining Process and Strike Strategy
Why are all the tentative agreements and employer's final
offers for four years, instead of three years?
The employer's improved wage mandate to 2.5%, 2.25%, 2.4% and 2.5%
at all bargaining tables was based on the acceptance of a four-year
term. The employer made it clear that both the economic
increases and the length of the agreements/final offers were fixed
and not open to discussion with the teams.
Prior to negotiations resuming on October 8th , the employer's
wage offers were somewhere in the range of 2.25% 1.75% and 1.75%
offered by the CRA and Treasury Board, and 2.5%, 2% and 2% offered
by Parks.
Why is the employer's final offer for Table 1 and 3 being
put out to the membership for a vote if it is being rejected by
the negotiating team?
The employer made it clear that the offer they put forward
at Tables 1 and 3 was their final offer. They also
made it clear that they would engage in a “proactive communications
strategy” on the contents of these offers if the Union did not meet
their deadlines.
Tables 1 and 3 were forced by the employer to address rollbacks.
Although the teams did not believe the final offer
was fair and equitable, they ultimately decided to put the employer's
final offer out to a membership vote with a unanimous recommendation
that this offer be rejected by the members. The members
will now have an opportunity to decide on whether or not to reject
the employer's final offer.
Why did you suspend the general strike on October 15th?
The decision to take down the picket lines on October 15 was a
very difficult one to make. We could have remained
on a general strike and cost more than 90,000 members an additional
day's pay, allowing the government to save millions of dollars.
Knowing that the employer had no intention of increasing
their offer, we made the decision to call off the general strike
at Tables 1 and 3, and to continue with some strategic strike action
while the employer prepared its final offer and presented it to
the PSAC negotiating teams.
Management told us that vacation leave, union leave and
annual eave will not be approved until after the new collective
agreements are ratified. We will need a medical note for all doctor's
visits as well. Can they do this?
Yes, until the contracts are settled, management can continue to
operate in a no contract mode. In the short term,
if you have any serious concerns with this, please contact your
union representative. These issues are grievable.
Implementing the Results of the Membership Votes
What happens if we reject the tentative agreement or the
employer's final offer?
If the tentative agreement or the employer's offer is rejected,
the bargaining unit will remain in a legal strike position.
We will attempt to get the employer back to the bargaining
table, and will decide what strike action to take.
There is always the risk that the employer will refuse to return
to the bargaining table, and legislate an end to strike action and
impose terms and conditions of employment.
What happens if the tentative agreements or the employer's
final offers are accepted?
If the members vote to accept the tentative agreement or the employer's
final offers, then our members are no longer in a legal strike position
and we will sign collective agreements for all bargaining groups
who voted to accept the tentative agreement or the employer's final
offer.
How long does it take the employer to implement the tentative
agreements or the final offers?
The new terms and conditions of employment take effect immediately
and all newly negotiated terms apply. However, in the case of the
Treasury Board units, the employer will have 150 days to fully implement
the agreements. As a result, retroactive pay will not likely
be issued until 4-5 months after ratified agreements are signed.
The change from 90 days to 150 days is another concession that the
employer insisted on at the Treasury Board bargaining tables.
The Vote No Campaign for Table 1 and Table 3
What do we have to gain by voting No? Will
we actually be able to gain more by going on strike again?
The team members at Tables 1 and 3 are unanimously recommending
that the membership vote “no” in order to send a clear message to
the employer that they cannot implement rollbacks on our members'
backs. Team members firmly believe that our Table
1 and Table 3 members deserve better working conditions than what
the employer has put on the table as a final offer.
If the members of Table 1 and Table 3 reject the employer's final
offer, then they are sending a strong message that they are not
prepared to stand by while rollbacks and concessions are being imposed
on our members. They are sending a strong message
that an injury to one is an injury to all. They are
sending a strong message of solidarity and support for their bargaining
teams. They are sending a strong message that they want another
opportunity to push the employer to improve its final offer.
Rejecting the employer's final offer means that members remain
in a legal strike position, and strike action resumes.
We would hope that by engaging in strike action after a decision
by the membership to reject the employer's final offer, we would
be able to return to the table and obtain improvements to the offers
on the table.
Why is the employer's final offer being put to the membership
for a vote if it was unanimously rejected by the bargaining team?
If the offer at Table 1 and Table 3 was so bad why didn't you keep
on negotiating?
The employer's offer is being sent out for a vote with a recommendation
to reject it because the employer made it clear that this was its
final offer. If we wish to gain more then the members
need to make a decision based on what the employer has offered and
not offered. To tackle the employer will require a
strong commitment on the part of the members. This
is a decision the members need to make. Are they prepared
to accept what the employer tabled or are they ready to continue
strike action in an attempt to force the employer to improve its
offer?
Our negotiating teams had three choices – reject the offer and
continue striking, accept the offer and take it to the members for
a vote, reject the offer and recommend a no vote to the members.
Our Tables 1 and 3 negotiating teams chose the latter because they
believed that they could not get the employer to improve its offer
or abandon attempts to secure rollbacks without a strong membership
vote rejecting the final offer.
What happens if the employer's last offer is accepted?
The terms and conditions of the employer's final offer as outlined
in the Table specific bulletins and ratification meetings form a
new collective agreement.
What type of job actions are we undertaking until the vote
is concluded?
Until the results of the membership votes are known, PSAC members
at Table 1 and 3 remain in a strike position. Given
that the Table 1 and Table 3 negotiating teams are rejecting the
employer's final offer, it is certain that job actions will be undertaken
at Table 1 and Table 3. These job actions may include
work to rule and strategic strike action. Strike action
will be taken at the other tables if the employers engage in punitive
actions in the workplace.
When will the No Campaign begin and when will we be able to have
more information about the pros and cons of voting No.
The main reason for voting No is because the employer's offer is
not acceptable at Table 1 and Table 3. Your negotiating
team and the union leadership unanimously recommend the rejection
of these two offers. Further information will be available
when the No campaign is fully underway. |