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January 17, 2022
Colleges Urge OPSEU to Put Students First and Remain on the Job until Vote Results Released
Today, the College Employer Council (CEC) representing the 24 Ontario Public Colleges, asked the Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB) to conduct a vote with OPSEU academic employee membership on the CEC’s most recent offer.This morning, full-time and partial load academic employees received a copy of the CEC offer along with an overview explaining the changes to the current collective agreement.The CEC has been bargaining with the Union bargaining team (representing partial-load and full-time instructors, professors, counsellors, and librarians) since July 2021. In October, the parties voluntarily entered a month-long mediation with renowned mediator Brian Keller. He terminated mediation and issued a report of his findings when it became clear to him that “the Union team’s proposals were highly aspirational but not realistic”. In November the parties met in conciliation; however minimal changes had occurred since meeting with the mediator and so a No Board report was issued.“It has become clear that the Union will not moderate their demands regardless of the advice they are given or the fact the College sector continues to navigate a global pandemic. As such, the Colleges must think of the students. Students who have been faced with unprecedented amounts of uncertainty in their lives and in their College education,” said Dr. Laurie Rancourt, Chair of the CEC Management Bargaining team. “Today, the CEC has asked the OLRB to hold a vote for College unionized academic employee members to vote on its most recent offer. Additionally, we urge OPSEU to keep their promise to put students’ needs first by not escalating the labour dispute. We ask that they allow College faculty to continue working until the results of the employer vote come in, especially given the modest 59% strike mandate result.”The CEC offer includes all the terms and conditions the Colleges introduced on December 13, 2021, as well as three joint working groups on areas of shared interest between the CEC and the Union.“We embrace the chance to review workload, EDI, and Indigeneity in the Colleges, and are hopeful these joint working groups will provide the necessary data for informed decisions moving forward. The management vote gives academic employees a chance to have their voices heard on our offer,” said Graham Lloyd, CEO of CEC. “We are asking academic employees to look at our offer and recognize that we’ve reasonably addressed the areas of concern their bargaining team put forward. This includes introducing mechanisms for joint investigation and collaboration to improve conditions in key areas. A vote yes is a vote for labour stability and a vote to put students and their education first”.The most recent CEC offer focuses on enhancements for academic employees and includes no concessions. A summary of these enhancements is provided below. To review the details of the full offer visit www.collegeemployercouncil.ca/en/bargaining/CAATA2021.
If you have any questions please send an e-mail to info@collegeemployercouncil.ca.
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