[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

The closest one is four provinces away, but I did bookmark the number yesterday.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

I mean, there's basically Teamsters. There was one potential fit in terms of labour type niche, but their website implies they only take new individual members who are looking to get a job via apprenticeship.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

I was trying to get one of the other organizers to go to one of their 101 sessions since they used to have them all the time, but it looks like they no longer do in that area. I assume COVID killed it first, and then nobody ever really got it going again.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Hey now, I can't remember that much stuff at one time! /hj

For real though, they should change the email response that promises someone will get back to you within 48 hours. That's just misleading.

33
Ghosted by the IWW (hexbear.net)
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

(see my last post for context)

But now they have all my personal information, yay! /sarcasm

[-] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

The company has already tried pizza and sports days for retention, and I'm proud to say that four people showed up to the last sports day they tried! Pizza is something that has historically been seen as "literally the least they can do" and "I'd rather have the $10 that they budgeted for this." It's very hard to sway workers as cynical as ours with cheap treats, because they are not just unable to afford luxuries like pizza from a restaurant: they're unable to afford basic needs like rent. No amount of pizza can take the pain of that away.

As for days off, unless the company is paying them at time-and-a-half, most guys won't be able to take them. They rely on overtime shifts to make ends meet. I don't know anyone who takes vacation except the president and the salespeople.

I'm waiting to hear back from the IWW now before I get too gung ho on the committee. But I think it's safe to say that the cost of living crisis is so acute right now that it will be an excellent tool for us: we can always show our coworkers the wage-to-rent graph, and talk about how we can actually enforce regular raises with collective power. All of these guys have asked for and been denied raises so many times, most of the ones I've talked to are just fucking tired and don't want to have to be the one to advocate for themself anymore. They were always happy to hear that one of us was going to fight for something for them, even if it was unlikely we could actually get it.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

It's just extra weird because the industry normally doesn't have low starting wages. The whole problem is that they get you with an appealing starting wage and never give you a raise despite record inflation. So to see the wage table at a place that's unionized have worse starting wages is... something.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Me and the other guys on board so far are "lifers" and there's been no event to get us riled up or anything. I've always wanted to do it but circumstances didn't allow for it, but in recent discussions with coworkers I came to realize that we actually have several very good people willing to help out with this now. It's been a boiling frogs situation at the company for decades. We all know there's no point in listening to company platitudes because we've been around long enough to see the cycle. "Yeah we'll totally look into it! Oh, we said we would last month? Well, I'll move it to the top of my list!" Over and over. Can't even get them to take a damaged piece of equipment out of rotation for repairs until it almost kills someone. Even when we tell them it's gonna kill someone. So we're on the same page in this: that the only way to get things to change is to force it, and that we can only do that if we all stand as one.

Can't speak for anyone else, but I know that I tend to pursue goals relentlessly once I start. And pizza's never worked before. ๐Ÿ˜›

[-] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

It's a fairly large one: UFCW

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

I found a contract for a similar company in a public access database and did notice the no-steike clause. But given that all strikes seem to happen after contracts expire anyway I wasn't super worried about that.

Side note, the similar company that has a union has the saddest wage table I've ever seen. I know it's a corporate chain but I legitimately don't know how anyone survives at those rates! And they have a union!! The one good thing is that they have a regular raise schedule so people don't fall behind with inflation, I guess.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago

I 100% have the employee list on my own computer, with phone numbers for all the key people who run teams. Through my own contacts list and those of the people working with me, we can fill in a lot of the rest. I need to verify if 3 employees still work for us or not. The recent arrivals are added already. We have a lot of employee churn on the entry level but they send out an email every month welcoming the newbies, so adding them is no problem. Removing them as they go is.

We have a couple old reactionary dudes who are definitely anti-union, but basically just because conservatives have told them "union bad! ๐Ÿ˜ " We know to avoid them. We also know to avoid a couple key people who are buddies with the owner, although some of them are technically managers so I don't even know if they qualify for being part of the union? It gets complicated because of how horizontal our company structure is overall. Barely anyone actually manages people. (Part of the reason why we never get reviews or raises!)

Luckily the worst reactionaries that I knew of who would've fought tooth and nail against a union are gone. One of the old guys might complain about it, but he's far too lazy to do anything but mouth off, and his influence is limited to a small satellite facility with like 3 coworkers.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago

Yeah, I think most of the public sector stuff is unionized already tbh. I'm going to look at the well-known unions like Teamsters etc, but it's so hard to get a good overview of which ones suck the least. All the good stories I've seen recently in terms of won battles have been in Quebec which doesn't really help us out.

I'm definitely in the phase 0 of this: research. Going to do as much as possible before I launch into phase 1: planning. But planning is my strong suit and I've already got a few ideas for as to how I could go about mapping out employee social connections etc. I plan to not let this attempt fizzle like the last one did. It was before my time but I'm told that they didn't have the right people behind the effort. Marx give me strength fidel-salute

Anyway thanks for the info, I had entirely forgotten CUPE existed.

61
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I work for a small-ish company of laborers. We have ~100 full-time employees who work in labour, a small team of administrative employees, and very few managers all things considered. The reasons for this are part of the reason I need to be vague in public talking about this, because the details make the company very identifiable to anyone who knows anything about the industry.

Some previous employees tried and failed to unionize over a decade ago, but the vote was very close. Since then, wages have stagnated to a degree that make me laugh and cry, we are being pushed to work more and more overtime, and in general morale is very low. I am in contact with a small group of very well-connected employees who are 100% on board with unionizing, and I believe that we can successfully get the required signatures this time if we play our cards right.

  1. How does one go about choosing a union to work with? I have done some Googling but the results are useless. I need some kind of leftist search engine, please! I know of the major Canadian unions like Unifor and Teamsters, as well as the IWW, and then the very specific ones like the postal union or the teachers' union.
  • Does the IWW even do workplace organizing? I was under the impression that it was more of a thing you joined solo.
  • Are any of the bigger unions in Canada actually useful? We need a hard wage correction upfront and then guaranteed cost of living increases after that, and I don't want to do all this work to have some centrist 'union' let us down in negotiations.
  • Do you know of any trade-specific unions for things in the realm of carpentry and space finishing? (Again sorry for being vague in public about industry) I know that my industry is largely unionized in the US, but here it rarely is. I have not found any info from my Google searches as to which unions those other companies work with.
  • If we can't find anything that's a good fit, is it advisable to start an industry-specific union for us and others? Is that doomed to fail?
  1. I've found a few different groups that say "contact us if you want to organize your workplace" but basically
  • Most of them seem US-centric and we are in Canada
  • I worry that they're ops lol
  • Not sure if this is the IWW's wheelhouse or not. I don't want to take help from them and then form a union under Teamsters or something, kind of feels like wasting their resources idk maybe this is fine??
  • So uhhhh please recommend a good group to talk to about this in Canada! Or I mean a US group is fine so long as they have the knowledge about local rules and can help us.
  1. There is some complex stuff to explain about the company structure that make it hard to know how many people we'd have to get to sign cards and I would really appreciate someone knowledgeable messaging me privately so I can explain a bit, or point me to a good group where I can ask this question

Gosh sorry I am rather at a loss of where to start here so I'm someone could just give me a stick and point me in the right direction I would be exceptionally pleased, thank you!!

Edit: as a bonus I may have slam-dunk proof of wage theft by the company not paying certain employees overtime, would be great if we could also get some resources on how to retaliate for that in as big of a blow as possible. โœŒ๏ธ

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tiredcoworkers

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