Raitt suggests economy should be 'essential service'
CBC News
Posted: Oct 21, 2011 10:54 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 21, 2011 7:20 PM ET
Air Canada workers protest on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, ON Friday October 21, 2011. After three labour disputes where the government intervened, it's time to look at redefining essential services to include the economy, Labour Minister Lisa Raitt said Friday. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)
The government has to look at changing the labour code to include the economy as an essential service, Labour Minister Lisa Raitt said Friday — a day after Air Canada and CUPE agreed to go to binding arbitration and avoid a work stoppage.
After threatening back-to-work legislation for both Canada Post and Air Canada in June, and sending a second Air Canada dispute to the Canadian Industrial Relations Board to stop a strike, Raitt says it's clear in the government's legislation that they look to economic reasons as well as to the way the labour code defines essential services.
Asked whether she's considering redefining the code to include the economy as an essential service, Raitt says it's "a big question" she's examining with an advisory committee made up of academics and union and management representatives.
"It’s a big discussion that has to happen," Raitt said to Rosemary Barton on CBC's Power & Politics.
"What we do, and of course you can see that in our legislation, is that we deem not necessarily in terms of essential services, but when we see there’s effect on the national economy, we introduce an act in Parliament to ensure there’s not a work stoppage."
"Our code is specific that it has to be health and safety in order to avoid a work stoppage.… But we are seeing more and more this notion of the economy."
Air Canada and CUPE move to binding arbitration
Earlier in the day, Raitt offered her congratulations to Air Canada and its unionized flight attendants after they agreed to go to binding arbitration and avoid a work stoppage.
"This negotiated settlement is unquestionably in the best interest of employees, the travelling public and the Canadian economy," Raitt said in a statement. "I commend both parties for their continued efforts in resolving this labour dispute."
Late Thursday, the airline and the union announced they have agreed to let the Canadian Industrial Relations Board act as an arbitrator to resolve the contract dispute.
The airline and the union representing its 6,800 flight attendants have two weeks to come to an agreement and negotiate a deal through the board. Neither side can engage in any work disruption during the binding process.
A CUPE spokesperson told CBC News Friday that both sides dropped their complaints of unfair labour practices as a condition of the arbitration process. CUPE also said it is the union's expectation that the board will notify Raitt that her two ministerial referrals are now "moot."
Those referrals related to health and safety concerns if there were a work stoppage, and an investigation into the breakdown of the collective bargaining process after the membership twice rejected tentative agreements.
The federal government said last month it would introduce back-to-work legislation if necessary, even as it referred the dispute to the CIRB. The NDP criticized those moves as interfering in negotiations, but Raitt defended the government's decision.
"Our government remains supportive of the concept of free collective bargaining, and as I have always stated, it is best when both parties work together to achieve an agreement," Raitt said in Friday's statement.
The flight attendants had rejected two tentative contracts and were on the verge of going on strike when Raitt referred the matter to the CIRB.
On Friday, the flights attendants, backed by their supporters, staged a noon-hour rally in front of Parliament Hill to show their public displeasure with the federal government.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- A Japan-bound Air Canada Boeing 777 jet had to make an emergency landing at Toronto's Pearson airport on Monday, after one of its engines failed. more »
- CP Rail union, Tories battle over collective bargaining
- The federal Conservatives defended their plan to force striking Canadian Pacific Railway employees back to work as a way to keep the economy on track, while the union representing 4,800 workers said their collective bargaining rights are under attack. more »
- Bullyproof: One classroom confession
- Chadia became physically scarred after incessant teasing. Her story is one of 150 gathered in a video confessional booth at a Quebec school. more »
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico are back with mom

- Two Winnipeg children who had been missing for nearly four years are back home, reunited with their mother, after they were located in Mexico late last week. more »
Latest Canada News Headlines
- Wacky weather mix across Canada
- Canadians expecting a lovely spring day are getting more than they bargained for in many parts of the country today as weather forecasts look more like the dog days of summer or, in some cases, a winter freeze. more »
- Family of disabled mom killed in blast relieved at arrest
- The family of a disabled Alberta woman killed by an exploding package say they are relieved someone has been charged in her death. more »
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico are back with mom

- Two Winnipeg children who had been missing for nearly four years are back home, reunited with their mother, after they were located in Mexico late last week. more »
- Quebec resumes talks with student leaders
- Negotiations between student leaders and Quebec's Liberal government resumed this afternoon in a third attempt to resolve the tuition crisis. more »
The National
The Current
- The Hour Between Dog and Wolf: John Coates May. 28, 2012 4:04 PM A stock-market trader turned neuroscientist maps the biological origins of booms and busts.
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico are back with mom
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Canadian Everest climber's body recovered
- Thunder Bay flooding causes state of emergency
- Vatican denies cardinal suspected in leaks scandal
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- CP Rail union, Tories battle over collective bargaining
- Man, woman shot dead in Burnaby restaurant
- Wacky weather mix across Canada

