Current Events > Doug Ford wants to FINE Striking Workers $4,000 A DAY

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wackyteen
11/04/22 12:39:47 AM
#1:


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/03/ontario-doug-ford-strike-fine-bill-28-canada

The premier of Canadas most populous province is under fire for a draconian bill that would fine school support staff C$4,000 (US$2,900) a day for striking, prompting concerns that Ontario is eroding fundamental workers rights and setting a troubling precedent.
Doug Fords conservative government tabled legislation this week that would unilaterally impose a contract on education workers, and levy hefty fines for striking. The move escalates a bitter dispute over pay for education workers, including custodians, early childhood educators and educational assistants.

Justin Trudeau has waded into the standoff, the prime minister sharply criticizing the Ontario government decision to suspend peoples rights and freedoms.
The Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents 55,000 education workers, has called for an 11.3% raise for its workers often the lowest-paid in schools arguing that stagnant wage growth and high inflation have hit the lowest earners hardest.
The government has countered with a 2.5% annual raise for the lowest-income workers and 1.5% raises for others.
With little progress on negotiations and a strike planned on Friday, the government fast-tracked Bill 28.
If passed, the controversial legislation which fines workers C$4,000 a day and the union C$500,000 for striking would mark the first time in the countys history that the right of workers to collectively bargain and to strike could be legally stripped away.
The government acknowledges its bill breaches the countrys Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Human Rights Code, but says its priority is averting a strike.
Ontarios government is invoking a rarely used legal mechanism known as the notwithstanding clause, which allows provincial governments to override certain portions of the charter for a five-year time period.
Quebec has long used the clause to pass its language rights laws, but most governments have been hesitant to use the mechanism, said constitutional lawyer Ewa Krajewska.
The Ford government has been much quicker to reach for the clause and the worry from a constitutional rights perspective is that its becoming increasingly normalized to invoke it, she said. And Im concerned that every time theres a bit of a blow-up about rights and legislation, the government is just going to invoke the notwithstanding clause. The fact that theyre willing to go to it so quickly should give everyone pause.
Canadas justice minister called it exceedingly problematic, but Krajewska says there is little the federal government can do to stop it.
Lawyers say they are also troubled by the governments pre-emptive use of the clause which would shield Bill 28 from judicial review.
The Ford government is essentially saying it is above the law. This is not just an attack on the fundamental charter rights, human rights and labor rights of education workers. Its also an attack on our constitutional democracy and the rule of law, said Adrienne Telford, a constitutional and labour lawyer.
Canadas top court recognised workers right to strike in 2015. In cases where employees are deemed essential, the right to strike is replaced by arbitration.
Telford said that Ontarios attempt to unilaterally impose a contract and working conditions was even more worrying.
Workers werent even allowed to exercise their right to strike. Its pre-emptively taken that away. But whats even more shocking is that the government isnt replacing their fundamental right to strike with the right to arbitration, she said. Basically, this is an attempt by the government to avoid having to appear before an independent arbitrator and not get what it wants.
Ford has long styled himself as a champion of

the working class, but the row has prompted one union that previously endorsed him to call for the premier to reverse course.
Earlier this week, a branch of Labourers International Union North America, Canadas largest construction union, lobbied the provinces education minister to restore collective bargaining rights.
The Ontario Bar Association also condemned the move, calling the uncertainty surrounding fundamental rights potentially destabilizing and prompting fears the short term gains won by Fords government could come at a cost to society that might not be recognised until its too late.
In theory, governments could just include the notwithstanding clause in every piece of legislation that they have, said Telford. What is the point of fundamental rights and freedoms if they can just be pre-emptively and overridden and shielded from review by a court?

If this was implemented it'd go a bit like "Mass resignations in.... 3...2...1..." whenever it came time to strike. Unless they're just going to make it impossible to quit and under threat of punishment go to work. Now where have I heard that kind of system before...

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The name is wackyteen for a reason. Never doubt.
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jpenny2
11/04/22 12:44:30 AM
#2:


Man of the people Doug Ford: "Fuck unions, fuck education workers."
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Chicken
11/04/22 12:46:26 AM
#3:


And this is the man pandering to the freedom convoy, who claim to be all about supporting workers rights, yet the convoy is silent.

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gunplagirl
11/04/22 12:48:53 AM
#4:


That notwithstanding clause sounds effing moronic and like it was pretty obvious from the very beginning that implementing such a thing was based on some stupidly naive idea that nobody could abuse it.

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