arrow CEP Media Organizing arrow A Canadian Union Monday, 06 September 2010  



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flag.gifOne of Canada’s largest unions

While the CEP believes in international solidarity, our union is 100 per cent Canadian. Our organization began in 1992 when Canadian members of some U.S. unions decided they would prefer an organization based in this county. We believe this is critical for building our Canadian culture and economy. The CEP is Canada’s largest media union, largest telecommunications union, largest paper industry union and largest energy sector union. In other words our 150,000 members play key roles in who we are and what we do as Canadians. We proudly promote equality, tolerance, diversity, properly funded social programs, Medicare, Canadian culture and other core values of working people. We try to build social and economic democracy. Our goal is to make Canada, and the world, a better place.
 
Organizing Newswire
    Management in new media is fond of saying we can't have a union because we need flexibility says Craig Wattie. But flexibility for whom, asks the Internet producer at Torstar. Before we joined the union, management had the flexibility to not pay us on time, to pay some people less than others doing the same job, to provide no sick days, ...
    A concern about the fairness of layoffs and an informal discussion in the station parking lot started the process leading to a May 2004 first union contract at the New PL, owned by CHUM, says morning news anchor Bob Smith. The parking lot conversation in 2002 during which one co-worker said what about a union? got Smith thinking about the benefits that a collective ...
    Attitudes can change and people suddenly see the need for a collective agreement, even in notoriously anti-union workplaces, says a Toronto Sun editor who experienced the phenomena. For more than thirty years The Sun was the only non-union daily in Toronto, says Brad Honywill. People thought it would remain that way forever but then one day in 2002 the vast majority of ...
    Working at the Langley Times has changed a lot since the community newspaper became unionized, says Al Irwin, a reporter who was a member of the internal organizing committee more than a decade ago. I guess most important for me are the better wages and stability -- getting the union in here meant I could rely on this job to provide for my ...
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