Canadian Manufacturing

CEP votes massively in favour of ‘superunion’ merger with CAW

by The Canadian Press   

Manufacturing Canadian Auto Workers Union CAW communications Energy and Paperworkers union of Canada labour unions


CAW president said a new approach to organized labour is needed in light of what he called the federal government's attack on unions

Quebec—The Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada has voted by a large majority in favour of a merger with the Canadian Auto Workers union—a move that will create the country’s largest private sector union.

A union spokesperson says that more than 90 per cent of delegates to the national convention in Quebec City endorsed the merger.

The vote follows unanimous support by CAW delegates in August.

The new union would represent more than 300,000 workers across roughly 20 economic sectors.

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Most of the membership would be concentrated in manufacturing, communications and transportation. But the new entity would also represent some public sector employees working in health, education and transit roles.

Unions represent some 30 per cent of the Canadian workforce, according to the CAW, well above levels in the United States.

A 16-member committee of representatives from both unions unanimously urged the organizations to formally merge by 2013.

Key players have said the two groups must join forces in order to ensure protection for existing members and inject some life back into the national labour movement.

CAW president Ken Lewenza, who was recently re-elected to a new three-year term, has said it would be hard for the union to part with its name.

However, Lewenza said a new approach to organized labour is needed in light of what he called the federal government’s attack on unions in recent years.

CEP president Dave Coles has said the merger makes sense because the two unions share a similar history and have worked together in the past.

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