Kinngait hamlet workers threaten to strike as negotiations for collective agreement break down
CBC
Workers at the Hamlet of Kinngait, Nunavut, are threatening to go on strike at the end of the month.
It comes as talks "have broken off" between the Public Service Alliance North (PSAC North), Nunavut Employees Union and the hamlet employees during an attempt to reach a tentative agreement with the help of a federal conciliator last month, according to a news release Monday from PSAC.
"The workers have been voting — almost 100 per cent are in favour of going on strike if any agreement is not reached before the legal strike deadline," said Pitseolak Pishuktie,employee union president in Kinngait.
That deadline is set for Nov. 22.
Employees with the hamlet have been without a contract for over two years since the last contract expired in March 2020.
Pishuktie said wages for workers under the union in Kinngait are "very low" and that nearly 50 per cent of the jobs are vacant right now.
Pishuktie said if it comes down to a strike, he hopes a solution will come from it.
"I hope there'll be a change," he said.
The release said the impasse is in part due from concessions "being demanded" by the hamlet that would affect the "working conditions and livelihoods" of employees.
One sticking point is that the hamlet is looking to "remove rights to about one-third of the collective agreement articles for employees accepting positions directly funded by the government of Nunavut," the release said.
"They are attempting to do this regardless of how much money is in the funding contract between the [Government of Nunavut] and the hamlet," said NEU president Jason Rochon in a statement.
"This is simply an unacceptable situation."
The union and PSAC North said there's also an issue with the hamlet's proposed policy change in the collective agreement around when employees can go hunting. Essentially, PSAC North said the employer wants the right to decide when employees can take discretionary leave to go hunting.
"It has already been in the contract for many, many years," said Lorraine Rousseau, regional executive vice president for PSAC North.