Bargaining Bulletin #5 – McMaster Walks Away From Table

Brad WalchukUncategorized

Since late August of this year, your bargaining team has been working diligently to get the best possible deal for you. We continue to survey and canvass our members and depend on your continued engagement. We’ve heard you loud and clear: our members demand better wages and improvements to job security.

Today, McMaster walked away from the table without proposing a counter-offer and has stated that they will file for conciliation. What’s worse is they denied improvements to job security and demanded a 5 year contract. This is unacceptable. 

 

Wages

Over the last 13 years our wage increases averaged 1.5% (per year), well below the 2.75% inflation average over the same time period. Even still, our wage proposal (8.3% Year 1, 3% Year 2,  3% Year 3) has been viewed by the employer as untenable. Sessionals deserve a contract that mitigates the losses during a decade of austerity. The employer’most recent offer included an average of 3.45% in wage increases over 5 years. While the employer’s latest wage proposal may technically be in line with sector averages, we would still be left behind colleagues at comparable Universities by 2029.

 

Job Security

The employer has made their point: they prefer “flexibility” over job security.  Your precarious working conditions and your experience teaching is of little concern to them. They would rather be able to replace you with someone who they think is better than you.

 

Length of Contract

The contract McMaster wants is 5 years long. We would be locked into this contract with no chance of improvement until 2029. McMaster knows that a longer contract term that does not line up with other bargaining units will minimize our power. However, we made it clear: the offer McMaster made does not entitle them to 5 years of labour peace.

 

The Facts: McMaster Does Not Respect Our Work

The proposal we offered is fair, however McMaster has decided to file for conciliation. Conciliation involves intervention from the Ministry of Labour to assist with the bargaining process. Why did they file for conciliation? McMaster’s lead negotiator implied that we did not change our offer at all. In reality, we made substantial changes to reach a good deal for our members quickly! As much as we understand that guaranteed TA support is important to many of our members, we retracted that from our offer to show we are serious about making a deal.

 

Next Steps For Bargaining and Mobilizing

The employer stated they will file for conciliation next week. Filing for conciliation marks an escalation by the employer and brings us closer to a legal strike or lockout. We are still open to negotiations with or without a conciliation officer. The employer is able to return to the table at any time throughout this process, and we hope that they do.

Your Bargaining Team and the Contract Action Team will be ramping up mobilization efforts, reaching out to members and asking you for support and participation as the process evolves. We will be visiting you after your classes, speaking with you after your office hours, calling you and emailing you to keep you in the loop every step of the way.

Your participation in this process is vital. Please show your support by signing our bargaining petition.

McMaster heavily relies on Sessional Faculty in order to function as a university. That is why it is important for them to keep you tied into an abnormally long contract without job security and only meager wage increases. Your bargaining team shares your frustration and will continue to fight for a better contract.