censure

Strike prep: 500 days without a contract


Today marks the 500th day that AUFA members have been working without a contract. Indeed, we don’t even have a full opening offer from the employer yet. AU’s bad-faith bargaining is making it impossible to negotiate a new contract. Since the employer won’t bargain, AUFA’s Job Action Committee (JAC) has begun preparing for what seems like an inevitable strike.

A few weeks ago, JAC asked members to suggest tactics designed to pressure AU to agree to an acceptable contract settlement. A credible strike threat is necessary to get a fair deal at the table, and AUFA members should have some input into the tactics AUFA employs.

This blog outlines a high level overview of some of those member-suggested tactics. It also answers some of the questions AUFA members asked JAC. Over the coming weeks, JAC will discuss these tactics in some detail, as well as strategize when and how best to use them.

Suggested Tactics

The suggested tactics fall into three broad categories:

  • Operational: When AUFA members withdraw their labour, AU processes that rely on AUFA members’ work will slow or stop.

  • Financial: A strike (or its prospect) disincentivizes students to enrol in courses, thereby reducing institutional revenue.

  • Reputational: Strike-related communications (before or during a strike) can do long-term damage to AU’s reputation as a good place to work or go to school.

AUFA members suggested four main operational tactics:

  • a work slowdown or working to rule,

  • refusing certain or additional work assignments,

  • signing a “no scabbing” pledge with AUPE and CUPE, or

  • fully withdrawing labour (i.e., a strike).

AUFA members suggested a number of ways to apply reputational pressure to AU. In these examples, please read “bosses” as meaning members of both AU’s executive and AU’s Board of Governors.

  • contacting bosses and/or politicians (in person and electronically),

  • bringing in a mediator to bargaining sessions (creating an observer effect),

  • holding a non-confidence vote in AU’s bargaining team or the Board,

  • conducting a media campaign highlighting AU’s bargaining position and behaviour,

  • organizing information pickets (e.g., pickets, car convoys, leafleting) that target bosses and MLAs’ homes, offices, and businesses, as well as meetings of the Board of Governors,

  • publicizing data related to bosses’ salaries and administrative bloat,

  • informing and/or pressurizing the new president about how AU’s bargaining is affecting staff relations, and

  • organizing a national campaign of censure over AU’s bargaining approach.

AUFA members suggested a number of ways to apply financial pressure to AU, including:

  • organizing a student boycott for the duration of any work stoppage, and

  • asking colleagues to refrain from recommending that students attend AU or accept transfer credits from AU until bargaining is settled.

A small number of members noted that a work stoppage would lead to students experiencing delays in completing their education. Other members identified the risk that reputational harm might persist after a new contract is settled.

Questions

Members asked a number of questions. JAC has endeavoured to answer them below.

Q: Will AU save money during a work stoppage?

A: AU’s expenses during a work stoppage will decline because it will not pay AUFA salaries or benefits. This means that, for a strike to be effective, the financial impact of a work stoppage on AU’s revenue must be sufficiently large to offset these savings.

Q: Will we lose our jobs if we strike?

A: Unlikely. Alberta’s Labour Relations Code bars employers from terminating staff for participating in a strike. Article 12 of our collective agreement does allow AU to lay off staff (with notice), but AU would only be permitted to do this if a) “the employer permanently discontinues some or all of its operations, or no longer employs employees to do certain work” or b) AU is able to show financial exigency.

It is of course possible that AU will trigger a reduction in tuition revenue by forcing AUFA to strike. But AU normally manages enrollment fluctuations by reducing CUPE members’ teaching loads, so the risk of layoffs resulting from a strike is very low.

Q: How will I afford to live during a work stoppage?

A: A few weeks ago, AUFA provided information about strike pay and benefits as well as strategies AUFA members may wish to use to prepare for the financial impact of a work stoppage.

Q: Will the reputational harm cause long-term damage to AU?

A: Maybe. AU’s approach to labour relations over the past few years (e.g., repeatedly seeking unnecessary rollbacks to our collective agreement, adopting an unnecessarily antagonistic approach to labour relations, trying to bust the union) has made AU a less attractive place to work. Forcing AUFA to strike would only reinforce this view. A strike would also make AU look like an unreliable provider of education. AU could avoid these outcomes by changing its behaviour, both at the bargaining table and in the workplace more generally.

Q: Why does AUFA use Lego graphics in its blog posts and information updates?

A: Lego is a low-cost way to create custom graphics that convey the gist of AUFA blog posts and information updates in a quick and accessible way. These graphics drive up readership of the blog in a way that clip-art posts or posts with no graphics do not. The graphics also attach costs to bad behaviour by AU’s executive (e.g., by lampooning them) which, over time, appears to reduce their willingness to continue behaving badly.

Q: What is the status of the unfair labour practice complaint AUFA filed?

A: AU has delayed the hearing of the unfair labour practice complaint (as well as AUFA’s application for an ESA exemption) by providing few dates when AU is available to attend Labour Board meetings and hearings as well as by continually asking AUFA for additional information.

Q: Why is AUFA talking about a strike while bargaining is still underway?

A: Planning a successful strike takes time, so we need to start now. Members also need time to prepare. Preparing publicly to strike gives AU time to recognize that the threat of a strike is real, to consider whether it wants to alter its behaviour to avoid one and, instead, to negotiate a new contract (which is the ultimate goal).

Q: Is it common to wait until the end of bargaining to negotiate wages?

A: Sometimes parties choose to negotiate language before tackling monetary issues (e.g., AU and AUPE Local 69 are doing this). This decision is often justified as being a way to gain momentum at the table before tackling harder issues like wages.

It is worth noting, however, that the supposed dichotomy between monetary and non-monetary issues is a false one. Almost every piece of contract language has monetary implications.

One of the consequences of settling language issues before talking money is that doing so reduces the number of bargaining chips available to AUFA (and AU, for that matter) to structure a final deal that is acceptable to both sides.

Given AU’s track record and its lawyer’s assertion that AU’s full proposal is so bad that AU expects AUFA to strike, AUFA’s bargaining team thinks it is advisable to see the entirety of AU’s opening proposal before agreeing on any changes.

Q: Why is AUFA focused on complaining about AU not providing a full offer instead of telling us about wins at the table?

A: AUFA’s bargaining team provides updates after each set of bargaining dates. There have been no wins at the table to report. This is, in part, because AU’s partial opening offer contains a large number of rollbacks for which there is no justification.

Further hampering bargaining is AU’s unwillingness to present a full opening offer (see question above). It is unfortunate that AUFA has to pressure AU into doing the bare legal minimum required to engage in good-faith bargaining. But that’s a function of how AU is approaching bargaining.

Bob Barnetson, Chair

AUFA Job Action Committee

Bargaining Update: AU refuses to present monetary offer because it fears an immediate strike

AUFA and AU met on September 14 and 15 to resume negotiations. AU continued to refuse to provide its full proposal or its monetary position or provide a timeline for when it will table them. AUFA once again articulated that AU’s refusal to provide a full package is undermining trust and impeding progress at the table.  

One of the reasons AU gave for not presenting their monetary proposal was that they believe that, when they do, it will lead AUFA to want to strike immediately. “As soon as we table it, you will immediately declare impasse and strike”, said Chantel Kassongo, AU’s external lawyer contracted to lead negotiations.  

It is useful to know that AU has an opening proposal ready. It is not surprising that AU is likely going to seek wage rollbacks. That AU expects its opening proposal to trigger a strike does not absolve AU of its obligation to provide a full proposal as part of its duty to bargain in good faith. 

During the exchange, Kassongo expressed displeasure with how AUFA is communicating with its members. AUFA’s bargaining team responded by saying AUFA’s communications with its members are no concern of AU’s. In response, Kassongo said “It is our concern. They are our employees before they are your members. If they don’t have a job, they aren’t members”. It is hard to know what to make of that statement. An employer interfering in a union’s communication with union members would be committing an unfair labour practice.  

As for substantive matters, AU presented a revised proposal regarding academic freedom. They abandoned their original proposal of entirely new language and instead presented amendments to existing language. The new proposal addresses some of AUFA’s concerns but other concerns remain, including removal of “freedom from institutional censorship” and inclusion of a statement placing academic freedom in the context of the university’s responsibility to its academic mission. The biggest concern is AU’s continued insistence on removing professional freedom from the agreement entirely.  

AU also proposed changes to the equity provisions. AU’s proposal eliminates the Employment Equity Committee entirely and includes a letter of understanding (commitments that do not make up a part of the permanent agreement) promising to deliver an “institutional equity, diversity, and inclusion framework and action plan” by April 1, 2023. AU’s proposal does not indicate what process will be used to develop this framework or if AUFA members will be included in the process. In the AUFA bargaining team’s evaluation, the proposal amounts to removing the one formal, albeit flawed, process we have for improving equity at AU and replacing it with a “trust us” approach to developing a plan. 

AUFA was able to present in detail our proposal around occupational health and safety (OHS), which aims to codify in the agreement workers’ safety rights and an effective joint health and safety committee. This conversation was productive. 

The parties also continued discussion on the grievance procedure, to which AU proposes significant changes. The parties have a better understanding of each other’s position on this issue. 

We have two more days of bargaining scheduled on October 25 and 29. AUFA’s bargaining team is not hopeful AU will present the remainder of their opening proposal or their monetary position on those days.  

Overall, the AUFA bargaining team is growing increasingly frustrated with AU’s unwillingness to present some of the most important parts of their offer after nearly six months of bargaining. AU’s unwillingness to present an opening offer is, frankly, bizarre and I’ve seen nothing like this behaviour in 25 years in the labour movement. 

The bargaining team invites AUFA members to express any concerns they have about AU’s behaviour at the bargaining table directly to the three members of AU’s bargaining team who are AU employees. 

Alain May, alainm@athabascau.ca 

Margaret Kierylo, mkierylo@athabascau.ca 

Jessica Butts Scott, jscott@athabascau.ca 

Perhaps hearing directly from AUFA members will change AU’s behaviour to the bargaining table. Please copy AUFA (aufahq@aufa.ca) on your correspondence. 

 

Jason Foster, Chair 

AUFA Bargaining Team 

AUFA membership pass motions on Israel and Laurentian University at AGM

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The 2021 AUFA General Meeting was held this past Tuesday with 185 members attending, approximately 44% of the current AUFA membership. This incredible turnout is thanks to engaged, active, and interested members who are taking charge of their own futures at Athabasca University. President of CAUT, Brenda-Austin Smith spoke at the AGM extensively on how executive incompetence mixed with austerity led to insolvency at Laurentian University, and the censure at University of Toronto over academic freedom.

AUFA members also endorsed a new equity statement and an Indigenous Audit of the association, both of which will be discussed on the AUFA website soon.

Motion on Israel, Palestine, and the University of Toronto

The CAUT censure of University of Toronto has brought to bear substantive academic freedom issues relating to scholarship on Israeli settlement and apartheid. Academic research that is critical of the Israeli occupation faces undue censorship and restrictions compared to research on any other number of controversial topics, and it is vital that faculty associations not only stand forth to defend academic freedom, but that they speak to the issue at hand with a collective voice.

AUFA condemns in the strongest terms all attempts to censor and contain legitimately scholarly research on the teaching of human rights and international law violations against Palestinians and Palestine. We publicly support, and voted for CAUT censure of the University of Toronto over this issue.

The motion, which was passed with a 74% majority, reads as follows:

Be it resolved, because Palestinians have the right to exist, we condemn the illegal occupation of Palestinian lands and continuing apartheid settler colonial practices of the State of Israel.

Because of the ongoing violations of human rights, forced evictions, deliberate destruction of buildings, and putting civilian life in peril perpetrated by the State of Israel towards Palestinians, we condemn the apartheid State of Israel and stand in support for an immediate ceasefire and end of the violence. 

We call on the Athabasca University Faculty Association and the university to condemn in the strongest terms the attempts to censor and contain legitimate scholarly research on and teaching of these human rights and international law violations against Palestinians and Palestine, and we call on AUFA to publicly support CAUT's censure of the University of Toronto.

Laurentian University

A second motion was passed with a 91% majority to demand the immediate resignation of the entire Laurentian University executive. AUFA once faced vague threats of insolvency in our past and the horrors visited about Laurentian University staff who have been denied access to their union and collective agreement rights must never be repeated. This is due to the incredible incompetence of the Laurentian University executive, and the mindless austerity of the Ontario Minister of Advanced Education Ross Romano.

The AUFA President will send a public letter demanding the resignation of the Laurentian University executive in the near future per the motion.

Motion text reads as follows:

That AUFA demand that all members of the Laurentian Executive resign effective immediately over the issues of financial mismanagement and invocation of Companies Creditors Arrangement Act Insolvency. 

AUFA Executive

The new AUFA Executive will see David Powell and Gail Leicht return as President and Treasurer for second terms. Stepping up as Vice-President will be Serena Henderson, and Dawn Mercer Riseli will be the new Secretary. The elected roster of constituency representatives is Lisa Boone, Travis Burwash, Bangaly Kaba, Joanna Nemeth, Darka Pavlovic, Rhiannon Rutherford, Ingo Schmidt, Myra Tait, and Jason Foster.

Marti Cleveland-Innes will serve as the new Board of Governors Representative, replacing Derek Briton who has fulfilled his term limit as BoG rep. Thank you for your service and excellent reports, Derek. In addition a large slate of elected committees has been filled. All new terms begin on July 1st.

Thank you to the AUFA members for your support, the incredible turnout, and ongoing engagement and participation. This is how we win.

David Powell

President, Athabasca University Faculty Association