Monthly Archives: December 2013

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International Migrants Day: Looking back on 2013 and migrant workers rights in Canada

Conseil canadien pour les réfugiés: retour sur 2013 et les droits des travailleurs migrants au Canada

En cette Journée internationale des migrants (18 décembre), le Conseil canadien pour les réfugiés (CCR) pense aux centaines de milliers de travailleurs migrants au Canada et à ce qui a changé pour eux et pour elles en 2013.  En mai 2013, le CCR a publié une série de bulletins évaluant les niveaux de protection et services offerts par tous les gouvernements provinciaux ainsi que le gouvernement fédéral.

Aujourd’hui, le CCR se demande ce qui a changé depuis la publication de ces bulletins. Les gouvernements ont-ils réagi face aux lacunes identifiées dans leur bulletin respectif?

Le CCR est heureux de constater que certaines provinces ont pris des mesures, en l’absence d’actions concertées de la part du gouvernement fédéral, afin d’améliorer les services et les protections offerts aux travailleurs migrants.

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UFCW release on migrants day

international_migrants_day2_2013_en_11x17_emailToronto – December 18, 2013 – International Migrants Day – December 18, annually commemorates the adoption the International Convention on the Protection of Rights of all Migrant Workers and their Families by the United Nations on December 18, 1990. In this upcoming holiday season, migrant workers can only hope that their ability to access to Employment Insurance (EI) special benefits is restored in Canada.  In 2012, the Harper Conservatives took advantage of the most vulnerable workers in our great country and curtailed access to Parental Leave and other special leave benefits; the only benefits that had ever been available to migrant worker under EI — all of this while the Harper government continues to annually collect millions of dollars in EI premiums from migrant workers.

 

This shameful injustice cannot be left unchallenged, and just a month ago our efforts showed that WE can make a difference. Working with community allies, we were able to convince a federal court that the arbitrary denial of Parental Leave EI benefits to migrant workers was not only shameful but illegal. The Federal Court of Appeal ruled that the Office of the Umpire would be mandated to re-hear 102 cases pertaining to EI benefits sought by migrant workers throughout the 2012 qualifying period. Most cases comprised of Agriculture Workers Alliance (AWA) members. The Court of Appeal cited that migrant workers are at a “unique disadvantage” with respect to their ability to file EI claims in the first place.

 

For decades, UFCW Canada has been the leading voice and advocate for migrant and temporary foreign workers in Canada. December 18, International Migrants Day serves as a reminder that while we have advanced, the struggle for migrant workers’ rights continues. So does our commitment.

 

On this 23rd anniversary of International Migrants Day, let us remember that Canada was built on the backbone of migrant Labour. While facing tremendous struggles herself, one migrant worker recently commented that, “in spite of the challenges and obstacles we face, to improve our lives and those of our families back home, we should not keep our problems and abuses to ourselves.  We need to work together to make a difference. Beautiful pictures are developed from negatives in a dark room.”

 

History has shown that we can light a candle in a dark room and in doing so we too can be the change that brings fairness back to our great Canada.

 

In Solidarity,

Paul Meinema
National President

What moves you in times of crisis?

 

Political crisis moves politicians.

For the thoughtful, political calamities provide an opportunity to reflect on the root causes that led to that predicament and acting in a manner that can deal with those factors.

For other politicians, political crisis simply triggers a less noble self preservation instinct. The tactics that accompany this approach are typically: to deflect, to misrepresent and/or to duck and cover till things settle down and most importantly — stay the course.

What moves you in times of crisis? | rabble.ca