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LCBO workers vote 93% to strike if necessary

'People can’t survive on part-time, temporary, disposable jobs and neither can communities.' - Warren (Smokey) Thomas.

Toronto (24 May 2009) - Unionized workers at the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) have given their bargaining team a strong strike mandate to back their fight for good jobs at the profitable government-owned retail agency.

Members of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU/NUPGE) voted 93% in favour of strike action if necessary to win a new contract with the provincial agency. Voter turnout was 3,672, a record high for the 6,000-member bargaining unit.

“This vote is a clear signal from our members that we will not accept the destruction of good full-time jobs at the LCBO and we will not let up in our drive for better lives for our casual members who are struggling to survive,” says Vanda Klumper, chair of the bargaining team and a clerk at the LCBO store in Stratford, Ontario.

“When we return to bargaining this Tuesday we’ll be telling the LCBO that it’s time to start taking the conversation seriously.”

Exploiting part-timers

The central issue in talks, which began March 9, is the LCBO’s attack on full-time jobs and its drive to run its operations with a casual workforce with lower pay, no guaranteed hours, no job security, and no benefits.

“Right now 60% of members in our bargaining unit are casuals who earn less than $20,800 a year on average,” Klumper notes.

“People can’t live decently on that, they can’t bring their kids up properly on that, and they sure can’t think of ever retiring on that. An employer that boasts annual profits of $1.4 billion a year with so few employees has not just the ability but also the responsibility to provide good jobs in communities right across Ontario,” she says.

“Instead, the LCBO wants to destroy the 2,400 good full-time jobs we do have and is proposing that not one of our members will have a guaranteed, full-time, full-year job. This is just wrong.”

'The kind of Ontario we want to live in'

OPSEU president Warren (Smokey) Thomas says the LCBO workers, who joined OPSEU in 2005, have the full support of the union’s 120,000 members and its $50 million strike fund.

“This battle is not about our members, it’s about the kind of Ontario we want to live in,” he said. “People can’t survive on part-time, temporary, disposable jobs, and neither can communities.”

The collective agreement between OPSEU and the LCBO expired March 31, 2009.

NUPGE

The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 340,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good. NUPGE