The Toronto Star September 19, 1997 HARRIS BOWS TO PRESSURE FROM UNIONS "The Ontario Federation of Labour has assured us that the retention of the right to strike would not jeopardize public service or create instability." -- Labour Minister Elizabeth Witmer Province to drop temporary ban on strikes in public sector By Caroline Mallan Queen's Park Bureau The Ontario government has moved to avert massive labour disruptions by promising to back down on legislation that has infuriated public-sector unions. Union leaders said they will await concrete government action before halting plans for rotating strikes beginning next week that could include school janitors and administrative staff, hospital clerks and orderlies and municipal workers including garbage collectors in various Ontario cities. But the government, in an uncharacteristic reversal, appears to have given the unions almost everything they demanded. The key concession was a promise to drop plans to temporarily ban strikes while amalgamations of municipalities, hospitals and school boards are under way. Gone from Bill 136 at union insistence as well will be two commissions that were to sort out contract disputes and union jurisdictional fights during amalgamations. More than 450,000 public-sector workers are affected by the bill. Ontario Federation of Labour (OFL) president Gord Wilson has called a meeting of union leaders today to decide whether to call off next week's rotating job action. Labour leaders announced Wednesday that a series of rotating strikes could come as early as Monday in Hamilton, London, Windsor, Cornwall, Kitchener-Waterloo and Ottawa. Metro Toronto wasn't on the list. Teachers' bill 'milder': Ian Urquhart's view "I can't say what we are going to do until I know exactly what the hell the minister was saying to us," Wilson said. "We are very cautious about this." Labour Minister Elizabeth Witmer announced amendments to Bill 136 in the Legislature yesterday, moments after Premier Mike Harris lashed out at the unions for "fear mongering and hyperbole." The legislation, which received approval in principle by MPPs yesterday, will be amended during committee hearings before being passed at the end of the month. "The Ontario Federation of Labour has told us that the right to strike is essential to free collective bargaining. And they have assured us that the retention of the right to strike would not jeopardize public service or create instability," Witmer told the Legislature. But, Canadian Union of Public Employees' Ontario president Sid Ryan told reporters yesterday that "this is a government I don't trust for two seconds . . . and I want to see the details of what they have announced. "We have to continue the mobilization until the government is willing to sit down and explain to us what these changes actually mean," Ryan said. "This coming week we have planned walkouts." Leaders of Ontario's teachers' union were relieved to hear Witmer's announcement. They expect that legislation that would affect their right to strike will also be watered down when Education Minister John Snobelen introduces it next week. "It's amazing, I can't believe it," said Marshall Jarvis, president of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers' Association. "Nobody was ready for this one." The legislation as first written would have established a disputes resolution commission that would have had the right to ban strikes during first contract arbitration. Witmer said "the OFL said there is no need or justification for the proposed" commission so she announced that it would be scrapped, along with another commission called the labour relations transition commission. Witmer insisted that the changes were on the table during failed discussions with union leaders last week and were not a knee-jerk reaction to calls for strikes beginning next Monday. "These were issues and amendments that we were going to be sharing with the OFL, unfortunately they did not come back to the table," Witmer said of talks from which union leaders walked away. Most of the planned restructuring of municipalities, hospitals and school boards is effective Jan. 1, 1998. Harris, in his verbal attack on "union bosses" in the Legislature, said: "We were willing to engage in a meaningful dialogue. . . . the union leadership has chosen to engage in a war of rhetoric. We will not engage in this old-style exercise." Harris went on to say that this week's "flight of rhetoric" will not jeopardize the changes that Witmer is willing to bring in in order to make Bill 136 more palatable to labour. Witmer said she plans to use the existing arbitration process to settle collective agreements and will empower the Ontario Labour Relations Board to decide issues of union representation in the short term and seniority. She will also allow a secret ballot vote on choice of union following a merger. Witmer said after her announcement that she now expects labour leaders to return to the bargaining table and to set aside job action for next week. "I do believe that we have certainly endeavoured to be responsive to all of the concerns of our stakeholders. . . . I don't anticipate that there's going to be any strike." And the OFL's Wilson said in an interview that he is ready to sit down and talk to the government, instead of continuing to talk strike. "On the face of it, it looks good. I'm concerned because all of this has been so erratic," he said. "But now we've got to get the government to come to the table and define what it is the minister is saying." Wilson said he remains cautious since some of the wording in Witmer's announcement is vague, but he added that he is willing to hear the government out and labour leaders are to meet this morning to review the changes. Witmer also said she has assurances from Ryan and others that unions affected by mergers will not strike during the amalgamation process as a gesture of good faith. "Mr. Ryan again today stressed the fact that he felt that he could guarantee there would be no strikes during the period of restructuring and merger." Ryan countered that the guarantee only applies if employers do not try to take advantage of the situation to roll back wages and gut collective agreements. Judy Darcy, CUPE's national president, said she too cannot call off strike action until she is assured that the changes are not a "PR exercise." Witmer's changes fell far short of satisfying the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) and the Ontario Hospital Association (OHA), both of which had requested legislation to handle possible labour problems during amalgamations.