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2008
Timelines for Bargaining 2008
May 12, 2008 - OPS All Chairs
May 30, 2008 - Deadline for OPS Demand Setting
June 7, 2008 - OPS Regional Bargaining Conferences
June 21, 2008 - OPS Central Bargaining Conference
November 4, 2008 - Issues Bargaining Begins
November 15, 2008 - OPS Divisional, Royal York, Toronto
Bargaining Glossary
Negotiations – The process in which a
union presents the changes it would like to see in the collective agreement and
management presents its proposed revisions, and two sides bargain toward what is
usually a compromise position both can live with.
Conciliation – A process in which a
conciliation officer employed by the provincial Ministry of Labour attempts to
bring the two parties to an agreement. This may involve meeting with the two
sides in the same room or separately. Where a conciliation officer fails to
achieve an agreement, s/he usually recommends to the minister that a “no board
report” be issued. This “no board report” stemming from conciliation, triggers
the countdown to a legal lockout/strike situation.
No Board Report – Where a conciliation
officer is unable to obtain an agreement between the two parties, s/he
recommends to the Minister of Labour that a conciliation board not be appointed.
This recommendation is called a “no board report” and 14 days after the release
of this report, the two parties are in a “free legal position” which means the
employer can lockout employees or the union can strike.
Mediation – A process in which a mediator,
who may be either a government employee or a free-lance mediator, meets with
both parties in an effort to achieve the compromises necessary to reach an
agreement. The process is similar to conciliation, but mediation may take place
at any point in the negotiation process, and under all legislation. One
difference is that if a mediator fails to bring about an agreement, it does not
have the same strike/lockout-triggering effect as failure at conciliation.
Proposals – All the suggestions
from the members which form the package of demands the union gives to the
employer. These proposals will be met by management counter-proposals, and
revised again by the union in an effort to bargain a collective agreement
acceptable to the members. >
Negotiating Team – For the union,
this is a group elected by the members to achieve the best possible contract.
The team is responsible to the members for its actions and decisions.
Tentative Agreement – An agreement
reached at the bargaining table, which both negotiating teams have agreed to
recommend to their “principals”. The union team will recommend that the members
vote to accept the agreement; the employer team will recommend that the top
levels of management agree to the deal.
Lockout – An employer refusal to
let members of the bargaining unit come in to work.
Strike – Job action by a union,
which may include a slowdown, work to rule, walkout or any other collective
action designed to bring pressure on the employer.
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