Canadian Labour Reporter

September 1, 2014

Canadian Labour Reporter is the trusted source of information for labour relations professionals. Published weekly, it features news, details on collective agreements and arbitration summaries to help you stay on top of the changing landscape.

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8 Canadian HR Reporter, a Thomson Reuters business 2014 by the numbers September 1, 2014 union coverage of Canadian workers covered by a collective agreement are represented by national and international unions, according to a 2014 study are national union workers international union workers covered workers are represented by independent local unions represented by directly chartered unions of independent local unions and directly chartered unions account for the major- ity of all unions based in Canada. union size workers are represented by the average union operating in Canada. This distribu- tion is highly concentrated in a small number of large unions. of unionized workers belong to one of eight major unions in Canada. union affiliation of workers covered by collective agreements are affiliated with the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC). The remaining affiliated workers were covered by the Confédération des Syndicats Nationaux, the Centrale des Syndicats du Qué- bec, the Centrale des Syndicats Démocratiques, the Confederation of Canadian Unions and the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organisations . of workers covered by collective agreements are not affiliated with any congress. Collective bargaining major collective agreements were settled in the past year, the most since 2005. These agreements covered 1,014,210 employees — the most since 2010. of these employees acounted for three industries: in education, health and social services; in construction; and in public administration. average wage adjustments from major settlements, the lowest since 1997. While there were fewer work stoppages in 2013 than in 2012, the average duration (88.4 days) was three times longer. Major work stoppages in 2013 resulted in a total of 1,507,243 person days not worked. Source: Employment and Social Development Canada 94.5 % 69.5 % 25 % 3.8 % 1.6 % 70.7 % 6,142 46.2 % 69.2 % 18.6 % 432 42.3 % 27.3 % 13.9 % 1.4 % 83.5 % A snapshot of the labour movement Photo: Shaun Best (Reuters) Photo: Christinne Muschi (Reuters) Photo: Mark Blinch (Reuters) Photo: Tobias Schwarz (Reuters)

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