Canadian Labour Reporter

November 2, 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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PM #40065782 Labour Reporter Canadian www.labour-reporter.com November 2, 2015 ARBITRATION AWARDS see Collective agreements > pg. 3 Smelter employee fi red again after dismissal pg. 6 Chartwell Seniors Housing pg. 3 Autocars Orléans Express pg. 3 Les Aliments Parmalat pg. 3 1641-9749 Quebec pg. 4 Can-Am Pipe Works pg. 4 Ville de Quebec pg. 5 City of Yellowknife pg. 5 COLLECTIVE AGREEMENTS Photo: Chris Wattie (Reuters) Give yourself the gift of knowledge Enrol by December 31, 2015 and save up to $750 on 2016 programs! Learn more. Tel: 1-888-858-7838 Email: irc@queensu.ca Web: irc.queensu.ca Register today and start 2016 off right with a program from Queen's IRC. pg. 2 Saskatchewan fixes essential services law Amendments come after top court found unconstitutional practices BY SABRINA NANJI AFTER ITS ESSENTIAL services laws were struck down as unconstitutional by the coun- try's top court earlier this year, the govern- ment of Saskatchewan has now come up with the modified legislation. Bill 183, otherwise known as the Sas- katchewan Employment (Essential Services) Amendment Act, was introduced in the pro- vincial legislature on Oct. 15 following a di- rective from the Supreme Court of Canada, which shot down previous practice as uncon- stitutional in January after a legal challenge from organized labour. As part of the changes — the result of con- sultations with public sector employers and unions — the definition of "essential services" will be removed and an independent third- party tribunal will be established to settle any conflict. Previously, the government made the final call as to whether a service should be considered "essential." Not all injuries equal under Ontario nurses' disability plan A NORTHERN Ontario hospital network did not breach contract when it denied a nurse sick pay benefits despite the union's pro- test, an arbitrator has decided. The Ontario Nurses' Asso- ciation (ONA) filed a grievance against MICs Group of Health Services — a hospital network in northern Ontario — after J. May- er, a nurse, was denied short term disability pay for a shift worked in June 2015. The particular clause in the col- CONSTRUCTION Upper Canada Glass Richmond Hill, Ont. (10 employees) and the Christian Labour Association of Canada (CLAC) Construction Workers Local 52 Renewal agreement: Effec- tive April 1, 2015, to March 31, 2016. Signed on June 17, 2015. Paid holidays: 9 days. Fam- ily Day is an unpaid holiday. Time and one-half for all hours worked on a named holiday. Vacations with pay: 3 weeks The Supreme Court gave Saskatchewan one year to rework its essential services laws. Transit unions appeal essential services law Forbidding TTC to strike is unconstitutional: ATU, CUPE see Arbitration > pg. 6 see Changes > pg. 7 ARBITRATION AWARDS COLLECTIVE AGREEMENTS

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