1704239787 sector Quebec union meetings begin sector strikes in Quebec

sector Quebec: union meetings begin | sector strikes in Quebec –

The bodies of the various unions that make up the Public Sector Common Front will meet on Wednesday to consider the proposed agreement in principle reached on December 28 on the renewal of collective agreements.

At the moment these are conciliation bodies of the trade unions affiliated to the major organizations concerned – CSN, CSQ, APTS and FTQ – and not general meetings of members. The workers' meetings should follow from mid-January, as the members ultimately have to decide.

For example, the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), which is affiliated with the FTQ, will meet its panel on Wednesday to consider the proposed agreement.

The Quebec Union of Service Employees (SQEES), also a member of the FTQ, will meet with its local executive committees on Thursday.

The CSN-affiliated Federation of Health and Social Services (FSSS) will meet its committees on Thursday and Friday.

The other unions will do the same in the coming days.

A striker waves a Common Front flag.

Open in full screen mode

At the moment these are mediation committees of the trade unions affiliated with the large organizations in question and not general meetings.

Photo: Ivanoh Demers

The content of the proposed regulation was not filtered, with the exception of the term of the possible contract, i.e. five years, from 2023 to 2028. The collective agreements expired on March 31, 2023.

This discretion over the content of the settlement hypothesis is common when unions keep the news for their members, when at the same time they are entitled to explanations and details when they hold general meetings for voting.

The Common Front has always refused to publicly quantify its demands. It had essentially called for protection of its members' purchasing power in the form of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and an increase in variable percentages depending on the year in order to achieve some general catch-up.

The four union leaders walk on a street in Quebec.

Open in full screen mode

Common Front leaders François Enault, Robert Comeau, Magali Picard and Éric Gingras attend the meeting with the Legault government on November 29, 2023.

Photo: Radio-Canada / Sylvain Roy Roussel

“And that is what guided us in this blitz of negotiations to arrive at a proposed agreement,” CSN, CSQ, APTS and FTQ said at the conclusion of the proposed agreement. “Agreement in Principle,” December 28.

For its part, the Ministry of Finance reiterated that this important agreement proposal for a period of five years (2023-2028) takes into account the improvement of the working conditions of public servants and the organization of work through greater flexibility in collective agreements.

Uncertainty at FIQ, waiting at FAE

Union members demonstrate outside a hospital emergency room with banners.

Open in full screen mode

The FIQ has not yet finalized a settlement proposal.

Photo: Radio-Canada / Ivanoh Demers

For the Interprofessional Health Federation (FIQ), which represents 80,000 nurses, practical nurses, respiratory therapists and clinical perfusionists, the news is currently less encouraging.

The FIQ has not yet finalized a settlement proposal. However, on December 19, she requested and received the appointment of an arbitrator from the Ministry of Labor.

This then entered the scene. And he called on the parties to refrain from making public statements until January 15, to reduce the pressure and concentrate on discussions at the table. These intensive negotiations continue to this day.

In this context, FIQ will not hold any further strike days until January 15th.

As for the Autonomous Education Federation (FAE), its president Mélanie Hubert announced on Monday in a communication addressed to its members that in the coming weeks they will have the opportunity to decide on the agreement in principle recommended to them. to hold general meetings.