Ontario's use of notwithstanding clause in dispute with union a 'Pandora's box,' expert says - Action News
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Ontario's use of notwithstanding clause in dispute with union a 'Pandora's box,' expert says

The Ontario government's move to force school-support staff to stay at work by using theheavy hammer of the notwithstanding clause could have huge repercussions on labour relations, experts say.

CUPEwill fight back-to-work legislation; province promises to use clause to dismiss constitutional challenge

Education Minister Stephen Lecce speaks during an interview with the CBCs Vassy Kapelos at Queen's Park in Toronto on Monday after bringing forward legislation meant to halt a strike by CUPE-represented education workers. The Progressive Conservative government's promise to use the notwithstanding clause to enforce the legislation will have ripple effects, experts say. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The Ontario government's move to force school-support staff to stay at work by using theheavy hammer of the notwithstanding clause could have huge repercussions on labour relations, experts say.

"If the public is sympathetic to the government [in this case], then the government's actions will haveset asignificant precedentfor years to come," saidRich Appiah, a principal at Appiah Law Employment and Labour Counsel in Toronto.

Education Minister Stephen Lecceintroduced legislation Monday afternoonto avert a looming strike andimpose a four-year contract on about 55,000 education workers, including librarians, custodians and early childhood educators, but not teachers. Under the proposedlegislationworkers could face fines of up to $4,000 per day if they strike.

TheCanadian Union of Public Employeessays it will be looking at every avenue to fight the legislation, but the government saysit intends to use the notwithstanding clause to keep the eventual law in force despite any constitutional challenges.

The notwithstanding clause, orSection 33 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,gives provincial legislatures the ability, through legislation, to override certain portions of the charter for five years.

Noa Mendelsohn Aviv, the executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, said in a statement Monday that the clause was"never meant to be used in contract negotiations, or as a casual tool to disrupt basic human rights safeguarded in our Charter."

"This misuse, and the flagrant disregard for individual rights is wrong and it is dangerous to our constitutional democracy."

'The union is screwed'

CUPE said the workerswill stage a provincewide "protest" Friday meaning they will be off the job despite the legislation.

Labour experts had told CBC News earlier Monday that the government was likely to face a stiff and costly legal challenge by forcing a contract on the union, but Appiah said the government can pre-empt any court challenge by invoking the notwithstanding clause.

"I understand that the invocation of the notwithstanding clause is included in the legislation, and that being the case, frankly, the union is screwed," Appiah said.

WATCH | In a separate interview, Appiah spoketo CBC News Network:

'From a legal perspective, this union is screwed' if notwithstanding clause invoked, lawyer says

2 years ago
Duration 4:45
Rich Appiah, an employment and labour lawyer in Toronto, discusses the Ontario government's legislation designed to impose a contract on education workers represented by CUPE and the potential for its use of the notwithstanding clause to enforce it.

From a legal perspective, Appiah said, the union'sonly options are political: convincingstakeholders, community members and ultimately voters to join them in protest, as well aswalking off the job illegally.

"It's taking away a constitutionally protected right, and it'll be up to the people to decide whether they are on side with that," he said.

Public will decide

How much this changes labour relations will depend on public reaction, he said, noting that many people are tired of school closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"If the people allow this to happen, I think it will send asignal to other provinces that they have the upper hand in negotiations with educational institutions, as well as other public institutions," he said.

Appiah said he doesn't necessarily believe that means the clause, normally rarely invoked, will become commonplace now. For instance, an infringement on minority rights would likely be met with a significant "fracture" in society, he said, and would therefore be avoided.

This specific situation with its repercussions on education and the economy means it's a unique situation the government may find support for.

"I don't think we can use the circumstances to extrapolate what the government might do in a broader circumstance," he said.

Labour lawyer Rich Appiah says how much the government's use of the notwithstanding clause will change government-union relations depends on the public's response. (Submitted by Rich Appiah)

David Doorey, a York University professor specializing in labour and employment law, said there has been only one other Canadian use of the notwithstanding clause in back-to-work legislation in Saskatchewan in the 1980s. But the law has changed dramatically since then.

"Today, the charter protects a right to collective bargaining and to strike," he said.

"As a result, the Ontario government requires the notwithstanding clause to protect itself from a lawsuit."

Wildcat strikes could become more common

Andrew Monkhouse, a managing partner at Monkhouse Law in Toronto, said the move takes away the historic compromise between unions and employers that make strikes legal but predictable.

"I imagine that in a world where unions felt that historical compromise was not being followed, they might choose to resort [to] what would be called a wildcat strike," he said.

Wildcat strikes usually refer to strikes taken by workers without being officially sanctioned by the union. Like wildcats, they are unpredictable and hard to control.

Unions would likely see the situation as, "If they're not going to follow what [we]see as the law, we won't either," said Monkhouse, an employment lawyer.

He said further fallout from the decision will depend on how far the provincial government is willing to go. "I mean, are they really going to be putting labour organizers in jail for going on a strike when they've been legislated back to work under the notwithstanding clause?"

He said once the government opens the "Pandora's box" of using the notwithstanding clauseduring collective bargaining, it will be difficult for unions not to consider it part of every negotiation -including seeking assurances in their collective agreements that it will not be invoked.

Province may have avoided large legal bill

Paul Champ, a constitutional and labourlawyer in Ottawa, saidthe Supreme Court of Canada made it clear in 2007 and 2015 thatthe right to collective bargainand to go on strike can only be infringed on in very serious circumstancesand that that hadn't happened yet in this case.

"There hasn't really been a fundamental breakdown in negotiations," he said before it was clear the province would use the notwithstanding clause."The province hasn't tried to come up with some other way to arbitrate their disputes."

A man with short grey hair, wearing lawyer courtroom garb, climbs a concrete staircase.
The provincial government has not exhausted all avenues to resolve its dispute with education workers, according to labour lawyer Paul Champ. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Lecce said the government was willing togiveannual raises of 2.5 per cent to workers making less than $43,000, and raises of 1.5 per cent for all others. CUPEwantedannual salary increases of 11.7 per cent.

When the government forces a contract onemployees,it usually means significant payouts to workers later. Champ noted a case about a decade agoinvolving the B.C. Teachers' Federation.

"The province was ordered to compensate teachers going back years, not only for the value of what their collective agreement could have been, but also other damage through the vindicationof their charter right," he said.

Education unions also won a court challenge several years ago against an Ontario Liberal government thathadto pay more than $100 million in remedies.

Monkhouse said this support-staff contract and itsrelatively small 55,000 workershave outsized importance even without the notwithstanding clause, because they intersectwith inflation, school closures, and future negotiations with a larger numbers of workers.

"There's a perverse incentive against the government showing all of their leeway right now, because they're not necessarily looking at this fight, which involves a smaller amount of people than some of the fights that are going to be happening."

With files from The Canadian Press

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