Canadian Labour Reporter

August 24, 2015

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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Ottawa airport taxi drivers locked out OTTAWA — Taxi drivers serving pas- sengers at the Ottawa Airport have been locked out. According to Unifor, the lockout came in spite of a commitment from union mem- bers to continue serving customers during the current dispute with the employer. "We had set up a job action that affected the employer, while continuing to provide a vital service to the public," said Unifor na- tional representative Harry Ghadban. The drivers — members of Unifor Local 1688 — have been in a legal strike position since Aug. 1 in a dispute over dispatch fees. The airport authority recently called for an increase in fees, which would add to the cost of taking a taxi. In protest, the Unifor members stopped paying their dispatch fees as of Aug. 1 but continued to pick up passengers at the air- port. "Taxi drivers are already facing enough challenges, including from illegal taxi ser- vices, without driving customers away with increased fees," Ghadban said. "The airport authority is the catalyst for this." Effective Aug. 11, the employer disabled the transponders drivers use to open gates at the airport and said union drivers who refuse to pay the fee will no longer be per- mitted to pick up passengers at the airport. Western Canada leads in first- quarter job vacancies: Survey OTTAWA (Reuters) — Resource-rich western Canada led the country in job va- cancies in the first quarter, a new survey from Statistics Canada showed. The federal agency's largest business survey showed an estimated 399,900 job vacancies in the quarter, with a job vacancy rate of 2.6 per cent. By comparison, Statistics Canada's la- bour force survey had shown an average of 1.3 million unemployed people in the quar- ter. Among the provinces, oil-producer Al- berta showed the highest vacancy rate, of 3.5 per cent, followed by British Columbia at 3.3 per cent and Saskatchewan at three per cent. The largest province, Ontario, was ex- actly at the 2.6 per cent national average. Job vacancies in manufacturing tended to be concentrated there. A Statistics Canada official said one benefit of the new business survey will be enabling individual Canadians to discern in detail in which locations the greatest demand is for their particular o c c u p a t i o n a l skills. LABOUR BRIEFS 2 Canadian HR Reporter, a Thomson Reuters business 2015 FORMERLY CLV REPORTS Serving labour relations professionals since 1956 www.labour-reporter.com Published weekly by omson Reuters Canada Ltd. Subscription rate: $595 per year Customer Service Tel: (416) 609-3800 (Toronto) (800) 387-5164 (outside Toronto) Fax: (416) 298-5106 Email: carswell.customerrelations@ thomsonreuters.com Website: www.carswell.com Director, Carswell Media Karen Lorimer Publisher John Hobel Associate Publisher/Managing Editor Todd Humber Lead Editor Sarah Dobson | (416) 649-7896 sarah.dobson@thomsonreuters.com News Editor Sabrina Nanji | (416) 649-9348 sabrina.nanji@thomsonreuters.com News Editor Liz Foster | (416) 298-5129 liz.foster@thomsonreuters.com Marketing Co-ordinator Keith Fulford | (416) 649-9585 keith.fulford@thomsonreuters.com © 2015 Carswell, a division of omson Reuters Canada Ltd. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the written permission of the publisher. e publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting or other professional advice. If legal or other expert assistanceis required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. e analysis contained herein represents the opinion of the authors and should in no way be construed as being either official or unofficial policy of any governmental body. ISSN 0045-5113 Publications Registration 2089 Canadian Labour Reporter is part of the Canadian HR Reporter group of publications. Visit www.hrreporter.com for more information. Labour Reporter Canadian www.labourreporter.com Photo: Paulo Whitaker (Reuters) LABOUR LENS General Motors employees protest against job cuts at the GM plant in Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil. The protest was part of an ongoing strike by workers that began on Aug. 10.

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