-

Media Advisory: Frontline Workers Kick-off Series of 22 Political Protests to Restore Workplace Rights, Media Conference Monday 10:00 A.M.

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ontario Council of Hospital Unions/CUPE (OCHU) and CUPE Ontario are hosting 22 rallies across the province outside PC MPP offices, asking that the government revoke the COVID-19 emergency orders that can indefinitely override front line workers’ most important workplace rights.

“Frontline staff have sacrificed a great deal to support the people of Ontario during COVID-19,” says Michael Hurley, President of the OCHU/CUPE. “The government has declared the emergency over, yet it has stripped the most important workplace protections from this largely female workforce. For workers revered as heroines, losing the right to keep their shift schedule, to work in the same community, not to have their job eliminated without notice or their parental leaves cancelled is a terrible blow. We will mobilize until workers’ rights are fully restored.”

“This is an extraordinary, undemocratic, and unprecedented abuse of power. Front-line heroes – who put themselves and their families at risk to help keep us safe and who continued to deliver critical services in a pandemic – deserve better than unnecessary attacks on their legal rights,” says Fred Hahn, CUPE Ontario President. “And we'll keep organizing and applying pressure in communities until emergency orders that impact our members' rights are fully revoked.”

Michael Hurley, President of the Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU/CUPE) and Fred Hahn, President of CUPE Ontario, will hold a media conference on Monday, August 17 at 10:00 a.m. via Zoom.

WHAT: Media conference to review political protests to restore workplace rights

WHEN: Monday, August 17, 2020 at 10:00 a.m.

WHO: OCHU/CUPE President, Michael Hurley and CUPE Ontario President, Fred Hahn

WHERE: Zoom Conference Call

Media are asked to please register in advance for Monday’s 10:00 a.m. media conference at: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUqduiurDssEtTv_Smkf__HfWbAbHTLix0M.

After registering, media will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the media conference.

PW:gb/cope491

Contacts

Paul Whyte, CUPE Communications, 647-212-9887, pwhyte@cupe.ca
Daniel Tseghay, CUPE Communications, 647-220-9739, dtseghay@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Paul Whyte, CUPE Communications, 647-212-9887, pwhyte@cupe.ca
Daniel Tseghay, CUPE Communications, 647-220-9739, dtseghay@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

PRESS CONFERENCE: Strike Looms at Children’s Aid Society of Toronto as Child Welfare Crisis Deepens

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Now in a legal strike position, and with child welfare services under mounting strain, frontline workers at the Children’s Aid Society of Toronto are speaking out. CUPE Local 2316 is once again sounding the alarm that workers are facing chronic understaffing, program cuts, and years of provincial underfunding have pushed child welfare services to a breaking point — putting children and families at risk. At a press conference on Tuesday, February 17 at 12:30 p.m., union...

Ottawa projected to lose funding for 725 frontline health care staff and nearly 200 hospital beds by 2027-28: new report

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As hospitals cut hundreds of jobs and eliminate vacant positions amidst budgetary constraints imposed by the Conservative government, the largest health care union in Ontario is warning about longer wait-times, rushed care, preventable mistakes, and overcrowded hallways. CUPE released a new research report, “Driven to the brink: projected cuts to intensify Ontario’s hospital crisis,” which contrasts the additional resources required to simply maintain existing service l...

Ford Government passing the buck on university funding – students, workers and economy will pay the price

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ontario government made a funding announcement today that will continue deep staff cuts, rising tuition fees and increased student debt. “The minister was long on scapegoating, but short on funding. Ontario has the worst university funding in Canada, and he’s passing the blame for his own cuts to other levels of government, and passing more and more of the costs onto the students, who are already graduating with record debt loads,” said Fred Hahn, president of CUPE...
Back to Newsroom