Telus cuts subscriber access to pro-union website
Last Updated: Sunday, July 24, 2005 | 10:45 PM ET
CBC News
Related
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Telus subscribers can't get into Voices for Change, which says it's "a community website run by and for Telecommunications Workers Union (TWU) members. "
The site calls the company's move censorship, and TWU president Bruce Bell questioned its legality.
But the company said the site suggested striking workers jam Telus phone lines, and posted pictures of employees crossing the union picket lines.
Telus spokesman Drew Mcarthur said advocating jamming lines hurt the company, and access to the pictures threatened the privacy and safety of employees.
Bell said union members who post online exchanges about jamming Telus service lines are acting within their rights.
People who use service providers other than Telus can still access the sites, and Telus subscribers can get in through a proxy site, http://vfc.proxy.pfak.org/, Voices for Change said.
TWU workers went on strike Thursday, after the company said it will impose a contract. Talks began almost five years ago, but have been acrimonious and unsuccessful.
- FROM JULY 12, 2005: Telus to implement most recent offer to union
There have been court cases and fights before the Canada Industrial Relations Board.
On Friday, Telus got an injunction stopping strike supporters from blocking access to the company's facilities.
- FROM JULY 23, 2005: Telus wins injunction against striking workers
The union has sought rulings from the board and expects to file more related to "intimidation, interference and the use of replacement workers," it said Sunday.
But it also complained about the board, saying a July 21 decision found that Telus was bargaining in bad faith again. However "without including any punitive sanctions, the board is allowing Telus to violate the law with impunity," Bell said.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- Quebec Premier Pauline Marois says Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum should step down following his arrest this morning. more »
- Canadians jailed after Dominican post-wedding fight released
- Two Canadian men imprisoned in the Dominican Republic following a post-wedding brawl last month have been released and will be returning to Canada, a family member says. more »
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

- Canada will be vulnerable to economic disaster should the Northern Gateway pipeline be rejected, the proponent told a federal review panel Monday as the final phase of public hearings got underway. more »
- MPs weigh in on Justin Trudeau charging speaking fees
- The New Brunswick charity that asked Liberal leader Justin Trudeau to return a speaking fee eight months after he appeared at a fundraiser has sparked a debate among MPs about the propriety of accepting money for what some say MPs should do for free. more »
Must Watch
Latest Canada News Headlines
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

- Canada will be vulnerable to economic disaster should the Northern Gateway pipeline be rejected, the proponent told a federal review panel Monday as the final phase of public hearings got underway. more »
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- Quebec Premier Pauline Marois says Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum should step down following his arrest this morning. more »
- Parents of son 'brutally beaten' playing hockey want charges

- EXCLUSIVE: The parents of a 16-year-old Ontario hockey player who was repeatedly punched in the face and head by another player are going public with their video evidence — because they want the aggressor held accountable. more »
- Student with bullied past, 'The Doorman,' graduates
- CBC's Ioanna Roumeliotis goes back to London, Ont., to catch up with Josh Yandt, the student nicknamed "The Doorman," as he prepares to graduate from high school. more »
The National
The Current
- The Apostrophe Catastrophe Jun. 17, 2013 2:41 PM A grammar war is brewing between people who want to ban it , and others who feel possessive of -- the apostrophe.
- Parents of son 'brutally beaten' playing hockey want charges
- Canadians jailed after Dominican post-wedding fight released
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford needs security, brother says
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- The class photo that made a father cry
- Student with bullied past, 'The Doorman,' graduates
- Teen killed at mill near Vernon identified
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board
- Sick Regina boy who made waves around the world dies


