Emergency Response Must Lead to Long-Term Reform, Says USW Leader
2020 MAY 15 (NewsRx) -- By a
“Our 225,000 members work in every sector of Canada’s economy, from front-line health care workers to industrial and manufacturing, mining, forestry, airport security and universities. Each of these sectors has been affected in different ways - from mass layoffs for some, to a desperate scramble for necessary personal protective equipment (PPE) for others,” Neumann said in a presentation to the House of Commons’
“Temporary fixes must be changed into longer-term reforms, such as income supports to supplement EI, dramatic reforms to elder care, universal public pharmacare and universal, public child care.”
Neumann said too many Canadians are excluded from the
Many USW members have bargained Supplementary Unemployment Benefits (SUB). Neumann noted that the government has encouraged the negotiation of these benefits.
“It is therefore unacceptable that the CERB does not have specific regulations to permit the payment of SUB,” he said. “During this crisis, workers must be able to maintain their income. SUB payments are an important part of that equation.”
USW is calling for long-term EI reforms that must include: a reduced hours threshold and a higher replacement rate, with both applicable to parental/maternity leave; an extension of eligibility to migrant workers; and making expanded work-sharing a permanent feature.
“Under the
“This program must not be used for stock buybacks or increases to executive compensation, and employers should be required to ensure that pensions are protected.”
Neumann told the committee that emerging from the current crisis will require a reversal of a manufacturing policy that has largely consisted of signing as many free-trade agreements as possible to secure markets for Canadian goods, while at the same time looking to import the cheapest products available and outsource supply chains.
“This has not only left us unable to manufacture critical medical supplies during this pandemic, it has left us with a weakened domestic manufacturing base,” he said.
“It is time to put a long-term industrial job creation strategy back on the domestic agenda.”
Neumann said the pandemic has exposed the shameful treatment of frail Canadians in long-term care as well as the extreme undervaluing of care providers.
“It is a national disgrace that these workers are underpaid and forced to work in environments that are not designed for social distancing, or even privacy for residents and workers.” View Ken Neumann’s full presentation to the
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