Marking 20 years
of bold journalism,
reader supported.
Analysis
Health
Politics
Labour + Industry

Alberta’s Public Health Workers Strike Back

As COVID-19 rates hit new records, Kenney’s plan to lay off 11,000 sparks wildcat walkouts across the province.

David Climenhaga 27 Oct 2020TheTyee.ca

David J. Climenhaga is an award-winning journalist, author, post-secondary teacher, poet and trade union communicator. He blogs at AlbertaPolitics.ca, where this column first appeared. Follow him on Twitter at @djclimenhaga.

Infuriated at the Kenney government’s determination to lay off 11,000 public sector health-care workers and privatize their jobs, members of the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees walked off the job in a provincewide wildcat strike yesterday morning.

Last night, the Alberta Labour Relations Board ruled the work stoppage to be an illegal strike and ordered the employees back to work, and today they did.

Exactly how many AUPE members were involved in the walkouts was not clear, although wildcat strikes by the union’s health-care support workers, health-care aides and licensed practical nurses took place at 45 health-care facilities throughout the province.

While strikers were joined by members of other unions from the same worksites on their impromptu picket lines, there is no evidence of other health-care workers striking in sympathy — although many vowed to refuse to do strikers’ work. In addition, at some sites AUPE members legally picketed on breaks but didn’t leave their jobs.

“Nursing-care and support workers decided today that there was no other option but to fight to protect Albertans at risk, especially during the deadliest pandemic in a century,” said AUPE president Guy Smith. “By constantly short-staffing public health care, this government is pushing our members to the breaking point exactly when Albertans need them most.”

For their part, Alberta Health Services officials immediately warned strikers of harsh retribution: “Staff who choose to participate in illegal job action will be subject to disciplinary action and will not be granted amnesty,” said a memo to employees early in the day. Of course, such threats may have less impact on employees who face being laid off and having their jobs contracted out to private companies.

It could quickly become difficult to maintain infection control measures in many facilities if the strikes continue or escalate.

Nor was it obvious last night, despite the Labour Board’s ruling, what would happen next. The ruling was sent to the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench so it can be enforced with a contempt of court if workers defy the order.

Finance Minister Travis Toews, who with Premier Jason Kenney in self-isolation for exposure to COVID-19 appears to be the government’s lead spokesperson on the file, issued a triumphal statement in which he vowed not to tolerate illegal strike activity.

Alberta Health Services labour relations officials have been aware for weeks of the potential for a spontaneous reaction to the government’s massive restructuring of health care among the hardest-hit workers during the continuing coronavirus pandemic. They must have alerted the government to their fears.

Nevertheless, the government’s initial reaction yesterday offered little evidence the UCP had much of a plan about how to respond.

After demonstrations started taking place outside hospitals around 7 a.m., nothing at all was heard from Health Minister Tyler Shandro. Perhaps he was unprepared to defend the government’s view that health-care support workers are not essential, except when the government decides they are.

A previously announced news conference by Labour Minister Jason Copping and Jobs, Economy and Innovation Minister Doug Schweitzer, recently demoted from the important Justice portfolio, attracted reporters seeking comment on the unfolding strikes.

The key message of their announcement seemed to be that a few low-wage jobs would be closed to temporary foreign workers for a spell as a response to Alberta’s high unemployment rate.

The rattled-looking duo quickly read their scripts, dodged questions from a few journalists asking about the wildcat strikes, and pulled the plug on the virtual news conference as quickly as decently possible. Wherever possible, they referred questions to a midday statement expected from Mr. Toews.

In the event, when Mr. Toews’s first statement of the day was published, it echoed the AHS threats and repeated UCP talking points about why the government wants to make big cuts to health-care spending.

“My expectation is that all unions respect the bargaining process, stop putting Albertans’ safety at risk and abide by the law,” he concluded, apparently forgetting that the wildcat strikes had essentially nothing to do with bargaining and everything to do with the government’s arbitrary plan to eliminate 11,000 jobs and contract the work out to for-profit companies.

Still, this was an ironic position to take for a government prepared to use legislation to derail the collective bargaining process if it looks as if the results will not be to its liking.

Yesterday, the government made much of the fact the job action took place in the middle of a pandemic — notwithstanding the fact it’s been fighting with almost every health-care employee group, including physicians, throughout the pandemic.

Meanwhile, over the weekend, Alberta broke the 500 barrier — 500 cases of COVID-19 a day, that is.

It’s probably only a matter of days now before we surpass 1,000 new cases every day.

Less than a week ago, UCP media cheerleaders were proclaiming that having concluded COVID-19 is under control, wishfully as it turns out, Premier Jason Kenney was surging ahead with economic action.

With the impact of the government’s “near normal” school reopening and a rule-free Thanksgiving weekend now being fully felt, the only thing that appears to be surging is COVID-19.

Nevertheless, Mr. Kenney has continued to insist on his determination to keep the province’s businesses wide open.

Chief Medical Officer of Health Deena Hinshaw yesterday ordered a 15-person limit on some gatherings in Edmonton and Calgary. However, that doesn’t apply to restaurants, theatres, religious services, weddings or funerals. So don’t expect it to do much good.

This article first appeared in AlbertaPolitics.ca.  [Tyee]

  • Share:

Facts matter. Get The Tyee's in-depth journalism delivered to your inbox for free

Tyee Commenting Guidelines

Comments that violate guidelines risk being deleted, and violations may result in a temporary or permanent user ban. Maintain the spirit of good conversation to stay in the discussion.
*Please note The Tyee is not a forum for spreading misinformation about COVID-19, denying its existence or minimizing its risk to public health.

Do:

  • Be thoughtful about how your words may affect the communities you are addressing. Language matters
  • Challenge arguments, not commenters
  • Flag trolls and guideline violations
  • Treat all with respect and curiosity, learn from differences of opinion
  • Verify facts, debunk rumours, point out logical fallacies
  • Add context and background
  • Note typos and reporting blind spots
  • Stay on topic

Do not:

  • Use sexist, classist, racist, homophobic or transphobic language
  • Ridicule, misgender, bully, threaten, name call, troll or wish harm on others
  • Personally attack authors or contributors
  • Spread misinformation or perpetuate conspiracies
  • Libel, defame or publish falsehoods
  • Attempt to guess other commenters’ real-life identities
  • Post links without providing context

LATEST STORIES

The Barometer

Do You Think Naheed Nenshi Will Win the Alberta NDP Leadership Race?

Take this week's poll