Slim
Army.ca Veteran
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I know that we have some members of the force on this site so I thought I'd throw this up when I saw it.
Sat, January 29, 2005
Bill would help unionize RCMP
By BILL RODGERS, OTTAWA BUREAU CHIEF
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/TorontoSun/News/2005/01/29/913667-sun.html
RANK-AND-FILE Mounties will take another stab at getting their own union. Canada's national police force has been prevented from unionizing by the federal government, but a Conservative senator will introduce a bill next week that would open the door to an organizing drive.
Pierre Claude Nolin says his bill would "radically modernize" labour relations for RCMP officers by allowing them, for the first time in the history of the storied force, to vote on certifying a police association to represent them in collective bargaining.
It would also reform the RCMP Act governing grievances and disciplinary action to make the process more impartial and independent.
Canadians, however, wouldn't see the more than 13,000 Mounties manning the picket lines in a contract dispute. Nolin's bill does not give them the right to strike. A deadlock in contract bargaining would be settled by compulsory arbitration.
This is not the first time Nolin has tried to pass a bill on the issue. An attempt in 2003 failed when the Liberal government prorogued Parliament.
Sat, January 29, 2005
Bill would help unionize RCMP
By BILL RODGERS, OTTAWA BUREAU CHIEF
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/TorontoSun/News/2005/01/29/913667-sun.html
RANK-AND-FILE Mounties will take another stab at getting their own union. Canada's national police force has been prevented from unionizing by the federal government, but a Conservative senator will introduce a bill next week that would open the door to an organizing drive.
Pierre Claude Nolin says his bill would "radically modernize" labour relations for RCMP officers by allowing them, for the first time in the history of the storied force, to vote on certifying a police association to represent them in collective bargaining.
It would also reform the RCMP Act governing grievances and disciplinary action to make the process more impartial and independent.
Canadians, however, wouldn't see the more than 13,000 Mounties manning the picket lines in a contract dispute. Nolin's bill does not give them the right to strike. A deadlock in contract bargaining would be settled by compulsory arbitration.
This is not the first time Nolin has tried to pass a bill on the issue. An attempt in 2003 failed when the Liberal government prorogued Parliament.