Union leaders in Quebec denounce proposed labour law they say will unleash chaos
QUÉBEC — Union leaders from sectors across the province gathered in Quebec City on Sunday to decry a new bill they say could severely limit how unions are allowed to use dues collected from their members.
Quebec Labour Minister Jean Boulet tabled the bill, which proposes dividing union dues into mandatory and optional ones. Under the proposed law, any activities deemed to be outside of a union’s primary mission wouldn’t be eligible for financing via mandatory fees, but through optional ones only. Optional dues would also have to be approved through a majority vote before they could be collected.
“Jean Boulet is declaring war on labour unions. He’s going to create chaos like never before,” said Patrick Gloutney, the president of the Quebec branch of Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents roughly 143,000 workers in the province.
The union is one of more than 30 represented under the Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Québec, which hosted the press conference at a convention centre ahead of a congress set to kick off there Monday. The federation representing more than 600,000 workers is also among several expected to take part in parliamentary hearings beginning this Tuesday over the bill, one it described as a “frontal attack on the rights of workers.”
