Last week, Alberta’s Bill 7 was passed and came into effect. This Bill moves faculty and graduate student collective bargaining under the Labour Relations Code. This means bargaining impasse will (effective immediately) be resolved via strike-lockout. Overall, Bill 7 is sensible and necessary to respond to the evolving jurisprudence around freedom of association.
The two most contentious parts of Bill 7 have to do with transition periods. Bill 7 creates a five-year ban on workers selecting a different (or no) union. In contrast, Bill 7 moves workers from arbitration to strike-lockout immediately (and, indeed, a bit retroactively).
During debate, Alberta Party MLA Greg Clark introduced an amendment to create a transition period to strike-lockout. This extra time, he said, would allow workers and their unions time to prepare, both financially and organizationally for this fairly fundamental change to bargaining. Clark proposed a three-year extension, but even a one-year delay would have been a huge improvement.
Advanced Education Minister Marlin Schmidt indicated the government would oppose the amendment:
We believe, Madam Chair, that because of the length of time between the introduction of this bill, the lengthy consultation process that we’ve engaged in with our stakeholders since October 2015, and the fact that this decision came down in early 2015, the faculty associations have had approximately two years to prepare for a transition to this strike/lockout model. We believe that the transition time that has been given and is recognized in this bill is appropriate and just. (p. 811).
This response has a certain alt-facts ring to it. The content of the legislation was unclear until a month ago. The government clearly promised during the consultations that there would be a transition period. Every submission I saw by faculty associations flagged the need for a transition period. By contrast, there was no indication that strike-lockout would start immediately or affect negotiations currently underway. That kind of news would have galvanized associations to act immediately.
The Minister’s suggestion that the consultation period was the transition period (just, apparently, a secret transition period) is the kind of sophistry unions are used to from Tory governments. Compounding the growing sense that we’d slipped into some kind of alternate universe was ND MLA David Shepherd efforts to do some damage control later that day:
Now, the fact is that nobody will lose the right to use binding arbitration if Bill 7 is passed. In fact, it remains available on a voluntary basis, with agreement from both parties, under section 93 of the Labour Relations Code. (p.830)
This statement is either deeply naïve or completely disingenuous. Labour relations are about power and money. If an employer suddenly (by act of government) finds itself in a better position to grind wages, is it really gonna agree to binding arbitration and give away that advantage?
So what is the real reason for this double-cross?
Shepherd helps us out here when he explained the rapid shift to strike-lockout is about saving the government money: “Indeed, I think it’s a fiscally responsible thing to do… .” (p. 830) and “it will allow the faculty, the graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and the institutions to come to more prudent agreements ” (p. 831). “More prudent” is neoliberal code for “lower wages”. Still later, Shepherd noted:
Indeed, given our current economic climate I think it makes sense that we try to find labour negotiation models that are going to ensure that we use public dollars responsibly. We know that compulsory arbitration in the past has at times tended to result in higher wage increases. That’s something that’s not sustainable, and we certainly recognize that it is not the direction to be going in for the province right now (p. 831)
Shepherd is, of course, wrong about arbitration giving unions unsustainable wage increases (my association, for example, have taken zeros in four or five of the last 10 years because that is what we would have gotten at arbitration).
Setting aside, you know, facts, basically what is going on here is the NDs are in a fiscal bind and most expeditious way to minimize the wage bill in PSE was to give employers a hammer in the short-term by moving to strike-lockout while unions are unprepared.
This is exactly the kind of move the Tories would have made, although the Tories would have at least had the good political sense to lie about it. That the NDs have done this under the guise of protecting workers’ associational rights is particularly galling.
To be fair, the NDs weren’t the only who appeared to have transported into an alternate universe. Wildrose MLA Wayne Anderson proposed extending the period during which workers are stuck with their current bargaining agent from 5 years to 10 years. So basically the province’s most right-wing party is advocating forced unionization. (Pro tip: This may not play well with the base.)
Anderson’s motion is also inconsistent with the Wildrose’s handwringing about the possibility that the NDs will enact card check certification for workers throughout Alberta. Basically, the Wildrose is (facilely) asserting that the only democratic way to determine if workers want a union is through a certification vote (which gives employers time to meddle in the workers’ decision). Yet, apparently, it is cool and all democratic-like to deny faculty and grad students any opportunity to select a different (or no!) union for 10 years.
Mr Schmidt: … Of course, they won’t have that choice until 2022 as we recognize that there is some need to transition faculty associations and grad student associations into the new model so that they are well positioned to represent their members at the bargaining table. … We feel that 2022 is certainly an adequate transition time. Five years will give every faculty association and grad student association ample time to prepare for that date. (p.813)
This is a profoundly disturbing (and hypocritical) position for the government to take.
Faculty deserve the right to select their bargaining agent now, not in 2022.
Faculty currently in bargaining deserve a fair chance to prepare for a lockout by their employer instead of being dropped in the soup by the NDs.
And faculty deserve an apology for (1) being misled by the government about the transition period and then (2) thrown under the bus so the NDs can try to lock up the centre vote by being “fiscally prudent”.
This was first published on Bob Barnetson’s blog Labour & Employment in Alberta.
Jim Crowell says
So the argument advanced by the author is that unions that have been “successfully representing their members for years” can’t handle the right to strike without a lengthy “transition” period. As a member of a union that finally won the right to strike by repeatedly going on strike illegally, I find this anxiety about of the right to strike troubling.
Nancy Furlong says
It is not often I fundamentally disagree with this author but in this I believe he has missed the mark. Associations need to adjust to being subject to raids, decertification applications and other challenges while they transition from a legislatively mandated bargaining unit to one that is like most of the province with the right to association choice. The transition to right to strike is less necessary. I just negotiated a collective agreement with no transition from no right to strike to one with that right and we neither needed nor expected a transition. Employers stand as much to lose in a dispute as the association and the preparation time is the same. This has been on the agenda for 2 years now. An additional two years won’t change the need to be prepared and would only reduce the level of urgency that will help the associations organize. A Tory government would not have included any advantage for academic workers!
Bob Barnetson says
No. My argument is (1) faculty associations were promised a transition period to strike/lockout and planned based on that promised, (2) the government broke that promise and thereby leaving the unions in the lurch, and (3) the government is now justifying breaking its promise as necessary to allow our employers to minimize wage gains.
A secondary argument is that the government is saying (1) it had to hose the unions to ensure associational rights were protected while, at the same time, (2) denying union members the right to choose if and how they want to associate for a further five years.
My association, after some major scrambling, is now ready to strike or be locked out. But a goodly number of very small unions in rural colleges don’t have our financial resources. Some of them are currently in bargaining and now must face strike-lockout in their current round (because the legislation took effect retroactively for them), and they will be naked in front of their employer.
Overall, I think moving to strike/lockout is the right move. I just find the putatively labour-friendly government’s willingness to throw its allies under the bus to save a few bucks on public sector salaries a touch irksome.
Bob Barnetson says
Further evidence of dissatisfaction with Bill 7 from a union caught out by the abrupt change from arbitration to strike lockout: http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/u-of-c-faculty-associated-steamed-at-government