College faculty rally at Humber College ahead of forced vote on contentious contract - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:58 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

College faculty rally at Humber College ahead of forced vote on contentious contract

Faculty and staff from some of Ontario's 24 public colleges rallied at Humber College's north campus where the school's management offices are located on Wednesday morning ahead of a contract vote next week.

OPSEU is directing members to vote next week to reject the contract offer

The union representing faculty and staff at the negotiating table is directing members to vote 'no' next week. (Talia Ricci/CBC)

Faculty and staff from some of Ontario's 24 public colleges rallied at HumberCollege's north campus where the school's management offices are located on Wednesday morning ahead of a contentious contract vote next week.

The Local 562 chapter of the Ontario Public Service Employee's Union (OPSEU) encouraged members to attend the demonstration. Those who arrived in the early morning hours carried signs with messages like 'We Say No,' a reference to the union's intent to reject a contract offer put forward on Tuesday.

Demonstrators also briefly held up cars entering the school's parking lots, taking time to explain to individual drivers why they are picketing.

Bob Bolf, president of the Humber Faculty Union, said members decided to hold the rally in protest of "the games that management is playing at the bargaining table.

"They have needlessly lengthened the strike while preventing student from getting back to classes," he told CBC Toronto.

The work action began on Oct. 16, after tense contract negotiations fell apart. Primary points of contention include the ratio of full-time to part-time faculty, as well as faculty input on course content, which some instructors say is unduly shaped by administrators rather than those teaching the material.

A glimmer of hope shone through over the weekend as both sides returned to the bargaining table to restart negotiations. Despite the seeming progress, on Monday morning the Ontario Labour Relations Board ordered a vote. TheCollege Employer Council, which represents the colleges in the talks,also requested that faculty and staff return to work in the interim.

Demonstrating faculty told CBC Toronto that the offer up for a vote is essentially identical to the one that lead to the work action in the first place. (Talia Ricci/CBC)

Union members said they were caught off-guard by the move and considered it to be in bad faith.

"We were close to an agreement and then management pulled away all of its concessions and forced a vote," Bolfsaid.

Both sides continue to maintain they've made significant concessions to the other. However strikingfaculty said that they believethe contract up for consideration is more or less the same offer that the union previously refused to put to a vote.

The Ontario Labour Relations Board scheduled the vote to run from November 14-16, with resultsnot expected until days after that, when the strike will be nearing the end of its fifth week.

During a news conference earlier this week, union representatives saidthe timing of the vote "virtually guarantees" that the some 500,000 students affected by the strike will lose their semesters.

Amir Allana, a second-year paramedic student at HumberCollege, said the back and forth between the sides which has largely played out publicly in the media has been "anxiety inducing."

"Our biggest concern at this point is eligibility for the once-in-a-year hiring process," said Allana, explaining that Ontario holds only a singleannual hiring blitz for paramedics early in the new year.

Along with his classmates, Allana has continued to try to cover as much course material as possible in fears they could end up without a job for a year longer than they planned for.

"Learning this content is necessary to pass hiring exams that are going to take place in December and January, and those are independent of the college system," he said in an interview withMetro Morning.

"If things go on longer, it's harder to make up the content.