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 Posted on 7-7-2002
 Toronto 
                  Strike For Future Makes History
 TORONTO 4 July - More than 15,000 "inside" employees of the 
                  City of Toronto
 are joining 6,800 co-workers on the picket lines in the biggest 
                  municipal
 strike in Canadian history. A strike by the Canadian Union of 
                  Public
 Employees (CUPE) Local 79 began at 12:01 a.m. today. "We have 
                  made every
 effort to negotiate collective agreements with the City of Toronto," 
                  Ann
 Dembinski, the president of the local, told a news conference 
                  last night.
 "It has become clear that the politicians in charge of these 
                  negotiations
 don’t want to negotiate. They want to see 24,000 municipal workers 
                  on
 strike." Dembinski said that the members of her local would 
                  be joining
 members of CUPE Local 416, representing "outside" workers, on 
                  the picket
 lines because "their issues are our issues."
 
 The two municipal union locals are on strike because the city 
                  is demanding
 concessions on job security language. "The city says we want 
                  jobs for
 life," said Dembinski. "City workers do not have jobs for life. 
                  There is no
 such thing. What we have had is an agreement that permanent 
                  employees with
 10 years or more service cannot be laid off because of contracting 
                  out.
 Now, the city wants rid of that language because it wants to 
                  privatize city
 services and contract out our work."
 
 CUPE National President Judy Darcy told the news conference 
                  that: "With the
 city hosting World Youth Day in a few weeks, what kind of signal 
                  does it
 send to the youth of this city and the world when this employer 
                  wants to
 make sure that young people have no access to employment security. 
                  This
 dispute is about the future of our youth, the future of our 
                  city and the
 future of public services."
 
 Three thousand of CUPE Local 79’s 18,000 members are "essential" 
                  workers
 who do not have the right to strike -- workers in Homes for 
                  the Aged and
 ambulance dispatchers. Many of them will be joining the picket 
                  lines on
 their lunch hours and after work.
 
 The contract talks have covered four collective agreements: 
                  for permanent
 and temporary full-time workers, for part-time workers in 10 
                  Homes for the
 Aged, for part-time workers in the parks and recreation department, 
                  and a
 fourth contract for part-time workers in other city departments. 
                  Some of
 the hundreds of services that will be affected are child care, 
                  homeless
 shelters, social assistance, building inspections, city planning, 
                  public
 health, food inspection, and recreation centres.
 
 
    
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