Labour's Wider Fight in BC: CUPE president says
citizens' power is under attack
By Barry O'Neill
Sept 3, 2007
TheTyee.ca
[Editor's note: These comments are drawn from an address
given by CUPE B.C. President Barry O'Neill to his union's
convention on May 9, 2007, in Victoria.]
Since the provincial election in 2005, we have not seen
the kind of sustained attack on working people and communities
that we saw from 2001 to 2005, at least on the face of it.
But of course the cuts for the poor, for women, for community
services, for childcare -- they stayed in place. And thousands
of our brothers and sisters in the HEU who lost their jobs
did not get their jobs back. Those who did but were hired
by privatized companies -- or the people who replaced them
-- often live in poverty.
We have seen changes in the last two years, and in many
ways, the changes we are seeing in British Columbia today
are even worse than what happened during the Campbell Liberals'
first term.
There is legislation now that will fundamentally undermine
our school boards. ..School trustees are elected democratically
and locally to manage the education of our children. We have
our differences with them sometimes, but they represent their
communities and I think they are great.
Bill 20 creates new provincial superintendents that can
overrule school boards. And for some issues, it makes school
board superintendents responsible not to the elected trustees,
but to the province. The B.C. School Trustees Association
has passed a motion opposing the undermining of their autonomy
and called on the province to withdraw this legislation.
The province is also undermining municipal local governments….
More rights... for corporations
Then there is TILMA -- the Trade, Investment and Labour
Mobility Agreement. We know this deal is not about trade.
We know that any barriers for trade between the provinces
are minimal and can be dealt with. So why is the province
jamming this through? Why can't we have public hearings on
this? They are having them in Saskatchewan. Why can't we have
a debate in the legislature on this?…
Municipalities face the same thing in anything they do that
restricts investment -- and that would mean just about anything
a local government might do.
Private profiteers
And finally, there is privatization. We have seen the high-pressure
campaign on the TransLink Board to do the Canada Line as a
P3. Even though we were told that would not happen. And today
we are seeing how they are being punished because they didn't
come on side fast enough…
Democracy under attack
All of these things I've mentioned have something in common.
Each and every one of these measures undermines the democratic
process in British Columbia. Each and every one takes away
power from locally elected officials and puts it in the hands
of either the province or corporations….
Think about our most valuable assets: health, water power,
education,
recreation, transportation, communication. Each and every
one of these resources is already in private hands or is being
proposed to go into private hands. This is not an exhaustive
list, but these assets and services will all be controlled
by private business if this government is not stopped.
Fighting back
We in CUPE and the labour movement have a proud history
of fighting for public services and fairness. And fighting
back when those things are threatened. Our challenge, in this
world where there are new technologies and everything is "more,
faster, better," is to find new, faster and better ways
to fight the good fight.
Well, we're off to a good start with our information sharing.
The school trustees at their annual meeting in April not only
said no to Bill 20, they said no to the TILMA. And they also
passed a resolution saying they didn't want Partnerships B.C.
looking over their shoulder every time they made a decision
about a high school.
Municipalities across British Columbia have said no to the
TILMA. Many of them have said they want to be exempted, or
they want the agreement dumped.
I am proud to say that CUPE was the first organization in
this province to take action against the TILMA. Today, we
are working with a coalition of unions, environmental groups
and organizations like the Council of Canadians to fight this
agreement.
And finally, we come to privatization and public-private
partnerships. We know these deals do not work for our citizens.
They are secretive, they are expensive and they don't deliver.
But they are very, very profitable, and they are coming at
us faster than we have ever seen before. We know that to meet
the needs of municipalities over the next few years, there
will need to be 60 billion dollars invested, and both the
federal and provincial governments want that to fall in the
hands of their corporate buddies.
We are fighting them, and despite the vast resources they
have, we are often successful. How do you beat the money they
can throw at these projects? Knowledge, skill, dedication
and hard work. |