Supposedly only temporarily banned from starting their legal strike by Alberta’s United Conservative Party Government, Edmonton Public School workers didn’t show up at work anyway yesterday and instead joined a huge rally by public sector union members on the steps of the Alberta Legislature.

This sets the stage for a significant fight between the UCP, which is openly hostile to public-sector unions and appears determined to use legal maneuvers to prevent any and all strikes in the public sector regardless of court rulings saying unionized workers have that right, and the Canadian Union of Public Employees, a large national union apparently prepared to tangle with the government over its response.
When many of the 3,200 members of CUPE Local 3550 yesterday joined the already planned rally by unionized nurses, teachers, health care support workers, medical professionals and many others to protest difficult contract negotiations with public sector employers and repeated interference in the collective bargaining process by the province, CUPE Alberta President Rory Gill threw down the gauntlet.
“Today, we have made the choice to protect our constitutional right to strike,” he told a cheering crowd of about 4,000 people.
“All of you here, whether you’re nurses, teachers, education workers, municipal workers, social services, whatever you do, private sector workers helping us all out, we’ve all made the choice today that enough is enough! Hear us say, We’ve had it!”
“We are here for the people of Alberta,” continued Mr. Gill, clad in jeans and a T-shirt despite a cold fall wind hard enough to make the protesters’ flags snap. “We know this government is not. We don’t know who they’re for, but it’s not for Albertans!

“All of us here today, the labour movement, civil society, ordinary people, we’ve had enough of disrespect. We’ve had enough of disorganization. We’ve had enough of undermining our precious public services. We’re not gonna take it anymore!”
Back on Oct. 17, 92 per cent of Local 3550’s eligible members voted 97 per cent in favor of striking, and served legal strike notice on the school board the next day. The strike was set to commence today.
The local’s educational assistants, who help with the instruction of children with disabilities, are paid an average of $27,000 a year, Local 3550 President Mandy Lamoureux told the CBC. But they have seen pay increases of only about $1 per hour over the past decade. The cost of living has increased 34 per cent in the same period.
Nevertheless, on Tuesday, the Alberta Government appointed a “Disputes Inquiry Board,” which stalls a legal strike for 30 days, supposedly to help the parties find another way out of an impasse, but historically often deployed by the province to prevent unions from using the only mechanism available to them to bring pressure on recalcitrant employers.
In mid-September, the government did the same thing when CUPE members employed by public and Catholic school boards in Fort McMurray overwhelmingly voted to strike and gave notice, instantly defusing their strike threats to their employers’ advantage.

At the time, Mr. Gill said he had no doubt if the Fort Mac workers issue another strike notice after the 30-day delay, as they are technically permitted in law to do, the government will find something else to block them from striking. The belief the UCP intends to block all strikes in the public sector is widespread in then Alberta labour movement, and was part of the reason yesterday’s rally was organized.
Alberta public sector unions like United Nurses of Alberta, the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees, the Health Sciences Association of Alberta and CUPE are also thoroughly fed up with “secret mandates” provisions inserted into Alberta labour law by UCP 1.0 when Jason Kenney was premier, allowing the government to surreptitiously and probably unconstitutionally manipulate the collective bargaining process.
This is widely seen as part of Mr. Kenney’s successful policy of suppressing overall wages in Alberta to ensure the “Alberta Advantage” applies only to private-sector employers, which has been continued by the UCP under Premier Danielle Smith.
A report by economist Jim Stanford published last spring showed how working people in Alberta are experiencing unprecedented reductions in incomes, purchasing power, and living standards. “These challenges have been made far worse by deliberate wage-suppressing policies of the Alberta government,” Dr. Stanford wrote.
As Mr. Gill said at the time the Fort McMurray DIB was appointed, “this government does not believe in workers’ rights, no matter what they say about supporting the little guy.” He pointed to how the UCP constantly hectored the federal government for not interfering in the collective bargaining process in such federally regulated industries as airlines, railroads, and ports.
Yesterday’s large public protest was billed a “rally for respect” by its organizers. Negotiations are continuing between employers and AUPE, CUPE, HSAA and UNA for about 250,000 employees in health care, education, and government. In every case where negotiations are under way, the government has been directly involved – either as a covert interlocutor or, in the case of Alberta civil servants represented by AUPE, as the direct employer.
Leaders of all major Alberta public sector unions, plus Alberta Federation of Labour President Gil McGowan and national leaders from CUPE and the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions made brief remarks at the rally.
Mr. Gill told the CBC yesterday that Local 3550’s decision yesterday to join the protest would be a one-day affair.
Nevertheless, he promised the crowd, “we are going to protect our right to strike, to free collective bargaining. We’re going to protect public services. … Thank you all for being here today – get ready for more!”
The UCP government despises workers especially those who belong to a union. If you are the CEO of a fossil fuel company whose suits cost more than an educational assistant earns in a year, Marlaina will bend over backwards to find ways to funnel taxpayer dollars into your pockets. If you are a nurse, teacher, or otherwise provide public service, she will disrespect you at every opportunity. There’s always plenty of money for UCP junkets to Dubai, Europe, the sunshine states, etc.; never any when it comes time to pay the peons who do the work.
The UCP treats doctors, nurses, and anyone elese employed in the public healthcare system, and those employed in the public education system, including teachers, and education assistants like crap, so this is what they will see happening. I don’t think this the last of this type of thing either. Good on these people for showing the UCP a message, despite the UCP not giving a care.
I know what I’m about to say is radical. Dani’s government is Fascist. How can I prove this contention? I’ll leave that up to you. https://youtu.be/_Up43J52a8A?t=2
Not radical at all. Anti-union animus is a feature characteristic of Fascism. This is true the world over. Your observation is accurate and objective. If a government behaves like or adopts policies that are Fascist, then it is correct to call them Fascists.
POGO— you woke radical leftist, how dare you speak the truth????
It’s like certain BC media saying the NDP & Greens were “bashing, smearing” the conservative candidates for pointing out their racist, homophobic, conspiratorial ideology. Typical ‘fascist’ move, attack the ones who speak the truth.
— If you don’t want to be called a fascist, stop acting and behaving like one!!
Sidebar— just going to throw this out there– I wonder if Marlaina’s supporters have figured out that those golf carts that she is promoting, are only good in 15 minute cities….
just saying!
Hmmm, do they make winter traxs for golf carts?
Do we spoil the whole show by telling her golf carts run on batteries and would fall into that special tax bracket she created for vehicles?
{Knock three times…lol}
How can I deny you. You acknowledge my worst fears. Yet within this small space we share profound understandings! For you then.. https://youtu.be/2rO7turNL6c Only fairness is worth fighting for.
‘help with the instruction of children with disabilities’ is a very prim, if tangentially correct description of an EA’s role. The gladiator assisted the lion in entertaining the Roman public. Also saw NASA and Migrante Canada banners. And a large chunk, if not the full cohort of Edmonton MLA’s. Do you have a sense of how much job reclassification feeds the growing resentment?-‘the problems and unfairness of not allowing our members the right to challenge unfair job audits that result in lower classifications where there have been no changes in duties to reflect a lower pay grade’. Certainly felt as dirty a move as the DIB by the people I know, going back to when Darrel Robertson was newly appointed.
It looks like the labor movement certainly has it’s hands full with the UCP. Not surprisingly, the comment form the Education Minister was this was an issue between a school board and workers, basically nothing to do with the Government, even though it was the UCP that put a cap on increases and referred the matter to an arbitrator. It will be interesting how the other negotiations go, but I suspect just as bad as this one and Fort McMurray. Rather than trying to fight the UCP from the outside, perhaps they can try from the inside. I mentioned this before, if enough of these folks (lets say 100,000) buy UCP memberships, they can easily kick Smith out at her next leadership review. I think that would send a far better message to the ones remaining, but that’s just my thought.
The UCP government sure doesn’t like mandates when it comes to pandemics and their rural/dryland farmer/small business owner base. They love mandates when it comes to picking fights (with the federal government, really) over things like freedom of association, freedom of peaceful assembly and suppressing the wages of working people. How bizarre it is when “no mandates” signs appear for both causes.
The (mostly foreign-owned) media seem to be trying to avoid stories like this, but how long can the Alberta government ignore 250,000 people? Is their plan to replace all these people with below-minimum wage temporary foreign workers? Oops, they’re anti-immigration at present, aren’t they? Or will they eliminate all these jobs completely?
If this is some sort of plan for the premier to score points with her base before her leadership review, she’s playing a fool’s game. How can she possibly hope to come out smelling like a rose from this situation of her own making? The Drumheller coal mining strike made use of police and special constables for 1919-style “starlight tours”. I doubt very much the RCMP will do what was done then. Without her personal provincial police force to give special treatment to the unions, what then? The irony is that by picking fights with smaller groups, she might have created the 2024 version of One Big Union. She seems hellbent on a fight. This will not end well unless she changes course.
https://briarpatchmagazine.com/articles/view/remembering-the-1919-drumheller-strike
I was hoping for this to happen as there is no other way with this UCP pile of idiots. I hope the workers can squeeze them to crap. I am not part of the union but I will certainly be there on the next protest. I am sick and tired of this disrespect these brainless people show towards all of us. They are worse than a monarchic court.
It would be the best day ever to see them go down like melted fat.
Carlos: Postmedia columnists are on full defense of the UCP as their leader is inching towards her leadership review. What are they being paid by the UCP to publish this kind of malarkey?
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/jamie-sarkonak-albertas-defence-of-professional-free-expression-is-a-service-to-all-canadians
Anonymous: While much that is bad can be said about Postmedia’s columnists, I want to state clearly here that I do not believe for a moment any of them are paid by the UCP to publish their malarkey or would accept such funds of they were offered. Humbert Wolfe’s famous poem sums up the situation in Alberta journalism perfectly:
You cannot hope
to bribe or twist,
thank God! the
British journalist.
But, seeing what
the man will do
unbribed, there’s
no occasion to.
DJC
So useful idiots then? What a lovely story!
I still wonder about it. Something is fishy when these columnists keep defending the UCP, when they do so much that is wrong. I’m not alone in feeling this way. When you had a blog about Licia Corbella, basically trash talking Rachel Notley, another commenter had a similar sentiment. She didn’t reveal that she held a UCP membership, when she was endorsing the previous UCP leader, and online articles that referenced that were removed by Postmedia. Columnists don’t seem to have the integrity that they once had. I’m well aware of that.
As this government bashes the face of more and more groups in Alberta, I fail to understand why there isn’t a growing realization of the monster that some voters have unleashed by those voters? It must be something in the horrible water that rural Albertan’s are drinking.
Just a reminder that the largest collective bargaining unit in Canada was dismantled over the objections of most of its members by the Harper government in 2011. The government of Alberta laid the groundwork by attacking its provincially affiliated organizations. Once the Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba Wheat Pool cooperative elevators were bankrupted, the Canadian Wheat Board’s collective bargaining obligations were removed. The result is an oligarch’s paradise. Grain farmers now have no choice but to sell their grain directly or indirectly to one of the three or four global companies that now control the world’s grain trade.
The constitutionally based right to collective bargaining is under constant attack and always needs to be exercised and defended. So, I’m glad to see that national unions understand just how dangerous the government of Alberta can be to fundamental constitutional rights.
Rural Albertans are just powerfully greedy, racist and homophobic. The frac water they drink has nothing to do with that.
General strike let’s go. Time to ditch the wicked witch of the west.
A Little Bird….hey! there you go-
“Ditch the Witch” WWW
…
since the Ditchbillies seem to only understand 3 word slogans
I am a life-long CUPE Member. Retired from CUPE 3550. I am so proud of those members and will always stand in solidarity with CUPE 3550. And any other public sector union members.
Time for a general strike in Alberta.
I suspect that if the Orange Bad Man and his gang of highly questionable characters are driven of the cliff come Nov. 5th (and crushed in the subsequent civil war) even the kookburgers in the UCP will fear for their lives, in the face of an angry Alberta.
This one is for all the posters who articulate their displeasure here! https://youtu.be/DL9chEwuvkA?t=4
POGO— for us “titious” people, it’s all the other ‘stuff’ that’s on the walls, the ceiling and quickly filling up the spaces; and for Albertans- Marlaina’s proposed changes today are just an acceleration to fill the void.
….from the Tyee
The Americanization of Alberta Democracy..
Danielle Smith is looking south for inspiration ,ideas and laws.
They are not even trying to hide it anymore, but who is actually paying attention?
A real Libertarian wouldn’t be taking away or restricting people’s rights so much. But our supposedly (former?) libertarian Premier does not even try to reconcile her conflicting ideologies here. Because they can’t be.
The good news is when you try to limit or restrict people’s right is often when they realize what is at stake and stand up to assert them. So I am not surprised by this large protest.
Yes, the Provincial government has a lot of power and the current one tends to throw their weight around a lot against those it is not keen about. But in a democracy power is ultimately given by the people and can be taken back when a government starts to abuse it.
I feel that is what will happen here. In the short run Smith and the UCP may be able to supress people for a while, but that will not last as long as they think.
I see the UCP has laid out it’s plan for the next Legislature sitting, and top of the list is Alberta Bill of Rights. They claim to be protecting Albertans rights, but fail to mention how they have destroyed the fundamental right to strike. Hypocrisy is alive and well with the UCP.
I was in that crowd, and I was struck not by who was there, but by who wasn’t — or at least, who didn’t appear to be there from my vantage point, which was admittedly limited.
Firstly, I saw no evidence of the presence of any private-sector unions, such as Unifor, IBEW, or UFCW. Maybe they were there, but if so their presence was underwhelming.
Anti-labour conservatives across the country have been trying, often successfully, to drive a wedge between public-sector unions and their private-sector counterparts, which organized labour has done a poor job of combating. There’s a reason, for example, that some unions in Ontario supported the Doug Ford government in the last election there. Private sector unions need to vigorously resist this effort, since actions taken against public sector unions also redound against them. Remember, “an injury to one is an injury to all”.
The other conspicuous absence was the Leader of Alberta’s “party of workers”. Sure, a bunch of Edmonton-area MLAs were there, but Naheed Nenshi should also have been there. This event was organized with enough advance notice that he could most certainly have rejigged his schedule to attend.
For the sake of the children stand up for what is right and continue to work for fair wages already provided. The standard of living is already so low and the productivity of these people is abysmal. Next time you look at your paycheck determine how much money you lose due to union dues. If you could just invest this money in your future you would be better off anyways.