-

Toronto Community Housing Workers Trigger Countdown to Legal Job Action to Enhance Services for Residents

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Workers at the Toronto Community Housing Corporation (TCHC), represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 79, are bargaining to enhance safety, improve quality, and ensure affordability for Torontonians who rely on social housing. The union has requested a “no-board” report from the Ministry of Labour, following TCHC’s targeting of job security, seniority rights, parental/maternity leave, and its refusal to consider health and safety policies that would keep its employees safe. Once the report is issued, both parties will be in a 17-day countdown to a legal strike or lockout position.

“Our goal in bargaining is to secure and enhance services that families rely on,” says Dave Mitchell, President of CUPE Local 79. “Families have been and continue to be hurt by Toronto’s inadequate housing strategy—more than 79,000 people remain on waitlists for social housing. TCHC residents were especially hard-hit by COVID-19, and Local 79 members are struggling to reconcile increased workloads, years of leadership-level turnover and constant and costly reorganizations, with a lack of support from their employer.”

Local 79 members are serving tenants with increasingly complex needs, as 43% of TCHC households have a member with a disability and 26% are headed by a single parent. In 2020, members conducted more than 19,000 wellness checks and made thousands of referrals to supports for high-risk tenants.

“Eroding workplace rights and failing to safeguard workers from avoidable job loss is a real disservice to our frontline heroes who continue to come to work every day during the pandemic to help those who need it most,” continued Mitchell. “We can’t address Toronto’s housing crisis by sacrificing the rights of workers.”

CUPE Local 79 recently obtained an overwhelming strike mandate from its cohort of 700 housing workers. The local began negotiations with TCHC in September 2020.

CUPE Local 79 represents full and part-time workers at TCHC, the largest social housing provider in Canada and the second largest in North America.

lf/cope491

Contacts

For more information and media requests:

Paul Whyte
CUPE Communications Representative
647-212-9887
pwhyte@cupe.ca

Tor Sandberg
CUPE Local 79 Communications
416-655-8338
tsandberg@cupelocal79.org

CUPE Local 79


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information and media requests:

Paul Whyte
CUPE Communications Representative
647-212-9887
pwhyte@cupe.ca

Tor Sandberg
CUPE Local 79 Communications
416-655-8338
tsandberg@cupelocal79.org

More News From CUPE Local 79

CUPE enters arbitration on flight attendant wages with Air Canada

Vancouver, BC--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Air Canada Component of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) has begun its first day of arbitration with Air Canada and Arbitrator Paula Knopf to settle wages after flight attendants voted over 99% to reject Air Canada's final wage offer in September 2025. "These hearings will provide our members an opportunity to hear the facts around what transpired in the negotiations spanning December 2024 to August 2025, and also a sense of what to expect from t...

WestJet Flight Attendants Respond to Reversal of Reconfigured Aircraft

CALGARY, AB--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE 8125, representing over 4,700 Cabin Crew Members at WestJet and Encore, acknowledges WestJet’s decision to reverse the universally unpopular new 28-inch-pitch seat configuration. This pause follows significant concern from both employees and guests regarding the operational impacts and overall experience resulting from the denser cabin layout. “Our members have been telling us very clearly that these reconfigured aircraft led to increased tensions onboard, mor...

Latest response from UCP on health care crisis is a lot of nothing: CUPE

EDMONTON, AB--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A union representing Alberta health care workers is slamming today’s announcement from the UCP government in response to the crisis in emergency rooms. CUPE Alberta President Raj Uppal, herself a former emergency room worker at Grey Nuns Hospital in Edmonton, says that while the plans look good, no action is being taken. “The number of new beds announced today is exactly what they announced on November 14th,” said Uppal. “You can put the two press releases side by...
Back to Newsroom