Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My thanks to the committee for extending the invitation for me to be here today, and also to the clerk of the committee and the staff for assisting in the translation.
The 1996 task force report on which the last major rewrite of our federal labour code was based was appropriately enough entitled Seeking a Balance. It's ironic that the only issue on which that expert panel was unable to reach a consensus was the issue that's before this committee, the issue of replacement workers.
In that report—and I have the complete reference in my written remarks—they noted at the end that, despite the differences, there were some aspects on which they could agree, and also, they suggested several other ways of balancing rights during work stoppages.
In preparing for this presentation today, I reviewed most of the testimony that you have heard to date, and without a doubt, “balance” is the word that most frequently appears. Regardless of which side the presenters appear on, everyone recognizes that balance is a standard that needs to be appealed to. However, it appears that balance, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. As people have come before this committee, they've had some quite different perceptions in terms of what balance is.
So instead of piling on and parsing some of the data and the statistics that you have before you and have heard interpreted different ways, I thought I'd take the limited time available, first of all, just to put my bias on the table, because if balance, like beauty, is subjective, then it's only fair that we put our subjectivities on the table; and then I'll make three comments that I hope will be helpful for you as you consider this.
I grew up in an immigrant small-town Ontario background. My perception on unions as I was growing up was a negative one. My mother's workplace was unionized while she was there, and it was not a positive experience for her. In growing up, I heard concerns about the implementation of certain conditions that negatively affected her and in which she was a minority point of view. We also lived on a family farm, and the frequent postal disruptions that were the norm for the day in which I grew up caused significant economic challenges for our family.
Needless to say, when in my twenties I accepted a job as a union staff representative, I didn't make either my family or very many of my friends very happy. For 11 years I was involved in the front-line of labour negotiations. I represented agreements that sometimes involved dozens and sometimes involved thousands of workers. I represented my union at Ontario social contract talks. I was the union nominee on a $30-million Ontario health sector training and adjustment program. I have been on boards of arbitration under both the Hospital Labour Disputes Arbitration Act in Ontario and under the grievance provisions of numerous collective agreements.
I have publicly made what I call a conservative case for collective bargaining, arguing, one, that the character of work in a modern economy creates a natural demand for worker representative institutions; two, that most of the arguments that are traditionally used to portray unions as a negative impact on the economy are in fact fallacious; and three, that unions can make a significant contribution to workplace democracy and justice.
I raise these points only to illustrate that my bias coming in is one that favours collective bargaining. I believe collective bargaining is a good thing, and I have no doubt that the restriction on replacement workers proposed in this legislation will strengthen the hand of unions in labour disputes. Having worked with union members in the pain of a strike situation, I can appreciate the appeal that there is in seeing the rules of war changed in a way that gives one side an advantage. However, let me make three comments that I think should give pause to those who think this necessarily will achieve the good results they hope for.
First of all, I have a comment about what balance in labour relations is. Sitting at a negotiating table with collective agreements, one learns very quickly that the process is as important as the substance. Often you can have the identical substance come out of an agreement, and depending on how the process is perceived, when you go back to the members for ratification it may be either rejected or accepted because of the perception about the process and not necessarily what the actual agreement says.
I think there is a similar imperative in the process of labour law reform. The Sims report provided a package of reforms that represented significant degrees of consensus.
The resulting legislation was generally accepted across the spectrum as balanced legislation, not just because of the content it held, but also because of the process.
I would respectfully submit to you that whatever the merits or demerits regarding the arguments on replacement workers might be, the very process of putting forward a piece of legislation with a single amendment of the labour code on a controversial issue—the only issue the three Sims commissioners could not reach consensus on—is by its very nature an unbalanced and unwise approach to labour relations.
I've gone to many contract ratification meetings and have often had union members ask me, “Can we vote on this one clause separately?” Inevitably, that clause was a controversial clause on which there had been some give and take in the process of negotiation. If you were to take that one clause out, you would really destroy the entire balance that's in the document.
Others have mentioned, and the Sims report warns against, the politicization of the process. I was working in labour relations in Ontario throughout the nineties and saw what the pendulum swings on both sides of the spectrum resulted in.
Secondly, it's not just about labour-management balance; it's also about majority-minority balance. Collective bargaining, by its very nature, is majoritarian: a union needs to speak with one voice. But we need to that recognize there are minority voices. In some labour disruption situations—some that I've been familiar with—the issue is not always as much between the employer and employee as it is involving sometimes very fierce divisions within the union, which force the politics of the process to go forward in a particular way. There's a lot that can be said, and I refer to it in the brief.
The third point I would say is I that regret—and I think it's a significant public policy problem—the decline in our representation, numbers that have been going steadily down for a number of years. Legislation like this, I'm afraid, brings us back to defining the rules of war and the negatives of labour relations.
I refer to various Gallup data that we've commissioned, which basically say that if you ask Canadians whether they support unions, the result is positive, at an all-time high, but if you ask them about the specifics of various union activities—strikes, and some of the others—they're remarkably negative. In other words, Canadians support unions, but not necessarily the way some collective bargaining has gone in the past.
I recognize my time's almost over, so I'll leave the written comments to stand. I think there are a number of far more pressing issues that we need to face if we're going to see a vital labour movement representing workers in the future.
Thank you.