-

“Keep Municipal Staff Working”: CUPE Ontario Calls on the Province to Defend Services and Workers

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE Ontario, the province’s largest union, is calling on the provincial government to fund municipalities during the pandemic in order to keep staff working and on the payroll.

“Municipal services matter, now more than ever - and many municipal governments are doing the right thing by keeping workers on staff,” said Fred Hahn, President of CUPE Ontario, which represents close to 80,000 municipal workers in the province. “As this crisis unfolds, we need that to continue. Communities need the provincial government to send a clear and strong message to all public sector employers that now’s the time communities need public services, not layoffs.”

To secure the delivery of critical public services, the union proposes that the provincial government provide municipalities with funding. The province should also evaluate legislation that puts municipalities in a box in a time of crisis by prohibiting them having a deficit budget, according to CUPE Ontario.

“These workers are part of their communities and they want to contribute,” said Candace Rennick, CUPE Ontario Secretary-Treasurer, suggesting that redeployment, upon consultation with the union, is the best option. “The province just needs to put up the funds and finally examine archaic rules that leave municipalities without the tools they desperately need today.”

“We can’t leave anyone behind while we get through this,” said Hahn. “It’s time for the provincial government to send the message to Ontarians that they will support our communities with concrete actions when we need them most.”

kw/cope491

Contacts

Daniel Tseghay
CUPE Communications
dtseghay@cupe.ca | 647-220-9739

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Daniel Tseghay
CUPE Communications
dtseghay@cupe.ca | 647-220-9739

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

Stop shipping Canadian jobs overseas, says alliance of telecom workers

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new alliance of telecommunications workers is denouncing the offshoring of thousands of Canadian jobs by major telecommuncations corporations, to the detriment of the Canadian economy, as well as Canadians’ privacy, security and sovereignty. The Canadian Telecommunications Workers Alliance - a coalition of Unifor, the United Steelworkers of Canada and CUPE, three of Canada’s largest unions - is sounding the alarm about this growing crisis and demanding legislation fro...

New Alliance to raise the alarm on the offshoring of Canadian telecommunications jobs

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Representatives from the Canadian Telecommunications Workers Alliance – a coalition of unions representing tens of thousands of workers in the sector – will hold a press conference to launch their campaign to protect Canadian jobs from outsourcing, and to protect Canadians’ privacy and sovereignty. WHERE: OTTAWA – National Press Theatre, 180 Wellington Street, Room 325 WHEN: February 11, 9:30 AM WHO: Lana Payne, Unifor National President Marty Warren, United Steelworker...

CORRECTING and REPLACING “More than 700 nursing and PSW job cuts in Ottawa:” New report warns of longer wait-times and declining quality of care due to health care funding plan

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Day of conference should read: 10:00 a.m., Friday, February 13 (instead of 10 a.m., Wednesday, February 13). The updated release reads: “MORE THAN 700 NURSING AND PSW JOB CUTS IN OTTAWA:” NEW REPORT WARNS OF LONGER WAIT-TIMES AND DECLINING QUALITY OF CARE DUE TO HEALTH CARE FUNDING PLAN CUPE media conference on February 13 A new report warns that the provincial government’s funding plan for the next three years will have severe consequences for the health care system in...
Back to Newsroom