-

Academic staff at University of Toronto vote in support of strike action

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Saying that the University of Toronto is failing to provide a living wage, contract educators, contract instructors, teaching assistants, and post-doctoral researchers have voted 94.4 percent in favour of a strike if their employer does not take action to address the rising cost of living.

“We do the vast majority of teaching at the University of Toronto, but get paid less than other educators teaching the same courses. Instructors and the workers who teach labs, mark papers and foster the university’s world-class learning environment can’t even afford to live in the city they teach in,” said Eriks Bredovskis, president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 3902.

Nearly 8,000 academic workers, along with maintenance, caretakers, groundskeeping, residence and foodservice staff represented by CUPE Local 3261, will be in a legal strike position in early March.

Academic workers are seeking improvements to compensation that had been restrained for years by the Ford government’s unconstitutional Bill 124. As well, CUPE 3902 is pressing the university on inequalities faced by groups of workers who are paid less even though they do the same work as others on campus.

The union members are also demanding the university be a leader in Toronto by providing its most precarious workers with affordable sustainable access to transit – something that exists at most Canadian universities.

“Public transit is vitally important for working people, especially as the difference between our incomes and the cost of living are pushing us to live further and further from our workplace,” said Bredovskis. “What we are advocating for benefits workers and students alike. Our working conditions are their learning conditions.”

:PC/COPE491

Contacts

For more information, contact:
Craig Saunders, CUPE Communications | 416-576-7316 | csaunders@cupe.ca

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information, contact:
Craig Saunders, CUPE Communications | 416-576-7316 | csaunders@cupe.ca

More News From CUPE

CUPE blasts Ford government for $36 million budget deficit at Scarborough Health Network

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The union representing 2,500 health care workers at Scarborough Health Network is blaming the provincial government as the hospital battles a $36 million budget shortfall. Stacy James, president of CUPE 5852, says that SHN is facing a staffing crisis, which requires a big investment in improving conditions of work and care. However, the current budget deficit could lead to further reduction in staffing that would jeopardize the well-being of staff and patients alike. I...

A historic choice: Yolanda McClean elected CUPE Ontario president

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Delegates at CUPE Ontario’s annual convention have elected Yolanda McClean, the union’s serving secretary-treasurer, to lead Ontario’s largest union. McClean is the first education worker and the first Black woman to be elected president of CUPE Ontario, which represents more than 300,000 members working in the public sector. “I am humbled and honoured to have been chosen by CUPE members to serve in this role,” said McClean. “My foundation, as CUPE Ontario president, i...

Vanderhoof Municipal Workers Vote Overwhelmingly in Favour of Strike Action

VANDERHOOF, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE 1632 members have voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action following months of uncertainty after Mayor and Council declined to ratify an agreement that had been reached at the bargaining table. “Workers believed a fair agreement had been reached through negotiations,” said Dan Middleton, President of CUPE Local 1632. “After months of delays, our members are asking the employer to honour that agreement and provide some certainty for work...
Back to Newsroom