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Health Care Services Sector
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Bargaining Updates from 2005
Bargaining Update: Thursday, Jan. 20, 2005
Central Alberta health region employees get update on bargaining
RED DEER — David Thompson
Health Region employees represented by AUPE met in Red Deer on
Jan. 19 for an update on the state of their bargaining for region-wide
collective agreements.
“
It was clear at the meeting that these employees are prepared
to stay the course on this long road with us and they’re
showing remarkable patience as they do so,” said Red Deer-based
Union Representative Malcolm McNaughton, who chaired the meeting.
“
But this employer needs to know that their patience only goes
so far, and from the union’s perspective these negotiations
have taken too long already,” he said.
Representatives of both health region General Support Service
employees, members of Local 057 Chapters 004 and 005, and Auxiliary
Nursing Care employees, members of AUPE Local 044/002, were at
the three-hour meeting in the Black Knight Inn.
Because many of the members are new to AUPE, having joined after
this union won the Alberta Labour Relations Board runoff vote
required by Bill 27 in the summer of 2003, McNaughton commenced
the meeting with a history of the legislative framework that
requires AUPE and other unions to negotiate region-wide collective
agreements.
“
We told them that we’re unhappy with the pace of negotiations,
but that it’s very important that we get it right when
we’re consolidating so many agreements into one,” McNaughton
said.
To date, he told the members, most non-monetary items have been
agreed to by the employer in bargaining.
“
But anything with a dollar figure attached remains outstanding,” he
said. “Those items are going to take some time and probably
require some pressure to resolve.”
“
Getting s significant turnout at an evening meeting on a snowy
night in midwinter helps put pressure on the employer because
it makes it clear our members take these negotiations very seriously,” he
added.
The two locals plan more information meetings in the future,
McNaughton noted.

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