|
|
 |
|
Portuguese/portugais
Lusitânia. Vancouver, BC O Mundial: the Portuguese newspaper. Winnipeg, MB Portugal
noticias=Portugal news. London, ON Sol português=Portuguese sun. Toronto, ON Voice.
Toronto, ON Voz de Portugal=Portuguese newspaper for the Portuguese community in Canada. Montréal, Québec Voz
lusitana. Vancouver, BC
April 16, 2007
Labour
LIUNA ads target CAW members
TORONTO
The 30,000-member Toronto based Local 183 of the Labourers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA)
has publicly appealed to the membership of the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) to tell the auto union’s leaders to “back
off” from their attempted raid on the construction union.
“We respect your union. Tell your leaders to respect ours,” is the main message in full-page ads
placed in three daily newspapers in Southern Ontario, all in regions where significant numbers of CAW members live.
The ads outline the background to the CAW’s support of former Local 183 officers who were removed from
office last year.
In February, the CAW advanced one million dollars to the newly-created Canadian Construction Workers Union (CCWU)
led by deposed Local 183 Business Manager Tony Dionisio.
The CCWU used the money to hire other former Local 183 officers and staff who began attempts to raid their former
union. After two months of effort, they have persuaded only one group of eight Local 183 members to move to their CAW-funded
union. Even that certification is on hold as the Ontario Labour Relations Board has only given the CCWU conditional status
as a legitimate trade union.
“The Autoworkers’ leadership, especially Buzz Hargrove, have somehow lost their minds,” says
Joseph Mancinelli, LIUNA’s Director for Central and Eastern Canada.
“They attacked our union without the slightest provocation or rationale. They allied themselves with people
who for years betrayed the trust of their own members in an astonishing number of ways. With all the challenges now facing
the CAW in the auto industry, it is incredible that they would spend so much of their members’ money trying to destroy
another union in an entirely different industry, one in which they have zero experience.”
“A million CAW dollars and what have they gained? Eight new members, maybe.”
Mancinelli says that three years of independent investigations and hearings, including numerous decisions of
Ontario courts and the Labour Relations Board “prove beyond any doubt, except to the willfully blind,” that Dionisio
and his ruling circle in Local 183 were guilty of numerous unethical practices that severely violated Canadian trade union
values.
“They exploited undocumented workers. Benefits and pension credits were stolen. Union members and staff
were covertly spied on. Collective agreements were forged. Millions of dollars were misallocated.
“All of this and more has been proven. We don’t believe rank and file CAW members would agree with
Hargrove that their money should go to support such people.”
The ads appeared in the Toronto Sun, St. Catharines Standard and Kitchener-Waterloo’s Record. The Windsor
Star originally accepted the ad but on late Wednesday, refused to run it due to its “controversial” nature.
Mancinelli says the union will gauge reaction to the ads from CAW and other union members before deciding on
further forays into the public arena.
“We hope Hargrove comes to his senses,” said Mancinelli. “But if he doesn’t, he will
see that this is not a one-shot organization. LIUNA has been around for more than a hundred years.
“We know how to defend ourselves.”
CANADIAN PRESS
February 21, 2007
Labour
OLRB slams door on Dionisio
Sealed room to be open to LIUNA
IAN HARVEY
correspondent
TORONTO
The Ontario Labour Relations Board has ordered a sealed room filled with documents of
the previous administration of troubled Labourers International Union of North America Local 183 to be opened.
Previous leader Tony Dionisio and loyalist John Dias had sought to prevent their former parent organization
from getting access, saying the information in the documents would be used to further persecute them, but OLRB vice chair
Norm Jesin ruled otherwise.
“It seems that all the files were administered under the care and control of Local 183 under the previous
regime,” he wrote in his decision.
“They continue to belong, in my view, to Local 183. In light of the ruling regarding the other outstanding
matter, I see no reason why the Trustee for Local 183 should not have full access to all of the files, and I hereby direct
that the Trustee be given such access, and that he be given full control with regard to their use.”
LIUNA in-house counsel Dan Randazzo said the room is at the LIUNA 183 offices on Wilson Ave. in Toronto and
was sealed because there was a potential conflict of interest.
“Local 183 was in a legal dispute with the parent union, which is us, and so there were documents that
potentially could have created a problem if we had access to them because of that dispute,” said Randazzo, noting LIUNA
supported sealing the documents until the dispute ended, which with the OLRB ruling has brought closure. “But what they
did is they took all the secretarial computers and probably 60 other files and sealed it in.”
With the order granting access, LIUNA officials will be sorting through the files for other evidence.
“Certainly if we find more breach of rules or criminal code behaviour, we will pursue it,” said
Randazzo, adding a LIUNA hearing over the weekend has reserved judgement on expelling Dionisio and his loyalists from the
union.
“I have no idea what they’re talking about,” said Dionisio when asked for comment. “I
know nothing about it. If I did, I would tell you.”
It was the first of three setbacks to Dionisio and his followers in their action against LIUNA. Jesin also dismissed
Dionsio and Dias’ actions at the OLRB to force LIUNA to hold elections and review the firings of managers from the previous
administration.
Jesin said in forming a new union, the Canadian Construction Workers Union, and filing an application for status
which could constitute a “raid” at the OLRB, Dionisio has no more status in LIUNA.
“Clearly, Messrs. Dionisio and Dias have chosen to cast their lot with a new trade union and do not deny
that this new union may ‘raid’ the bargaining units currently held by Local 183. (Indeed, as of this writing,
at least one application for such a “raid” may have already been filed.),” Jesin wrote.
“Given the only individuals seeking early elections are the same individuals that have established a new
union to compete with LIUNA and Local 183, I see no reason to order elections to take place prior to June 12, 2007 and particularly
during the open period, even if the alleged ‘purge’ of staff had taken place.
“It makes no labour relations sense, in my view, to allow Messrs. Dionisio and Dias to use these proceedings
to exert and/or regain control over Local 183, while they seek to raid Local 183’s bargaining rights through another
union. Nor do I see any reason to consider reinstatement of staff members who have not appeared before me to seek such reinstatement.”
“We’re thrilled,” said Joseph Mancinelli, Canadian general manager of LIUNA. “The OLRB
has finally brought some closure to this whole affair.”
Randazzo called it the “final nail in the coffin for Dionisio and company. This is it, the end of the
road.”
Dionisio, currently organizing bargaining units for the CCWU, isn’t as thrilled.
“Well, I’m shocked,” said Dionisio. “
In a related court action, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled legal files held by former Local 183
lawyer Brian Shell should be turned over to LIUNA.
Shell argued since the files pertained to work commissioned by the former Local 183 leadership, they should
be turned over to Dionisio et al. He was also concerned other, unrelated, clients’ files might be “co-mingled.”
In his ruling, Justice D. Brown held the relationship was between Shell and Local 183 and not Dionisio and the
others personally, and that the documents should be turned over forthwith to an intermediate party for photocopying and access
to Local 183.
March 12, 2007
Labour
Another door slams on Dionisio
IAN HARVEY
correspondent
TORONTO
Tony Dionisio and seven loyalists have been formally expelled from the Toronto union local
he built into a powerhouse.
The announcement that the Labourers International Union of North America (LIUNA) had sought and won the right
to kick Dionisio and his crew out of the organization comes as no surprise given the bitter history between the man who once
led Local 183 and the Hamilton-based Canadian general manager Joseph Mancinelli.
The Ontario Labour Relations Board had also thrown out Dionisio’s pleadings a few weeks earlier, saying
he couldn’t continue to press his case as a member of LIUNA while obviously engaged in organizing a rival, the Canadian
Construction Workers Union.
At the General Executive Board Canadian Counsel hearing before Barry Stephens, the Canadian Independent Hearing
Officer heard evidence that Dionisio, Joao Dias, Luis Torres, Joel Filipe, Victoria Ferreira, Henry Pereira, John Goncalves
and Carlos Dionisio, the former business manager’s nephew, were highly visible in their efforts to convince members
of LUINA Local 183 to switch allegiances.
Aside from campaigning, some of the men also acted in an official capacity during votes for CCWU, such as scrutineering,
the hearing was told.
Tony Dionisio
None of those charged with breaking LIUNA rules attended the hearing, though all were notified. Torres was also
accused of failing to appear for questioning by the CEBCC under Article 8(d) of the Canadian Ethical Practices Code.
In the ruling, Stephens accepted evidence based on reports in Daily Commercial News that the Canadian Auto Workers
had advanced $1 million in loans to the CCWU for the purposes of recruiting members during the “open season” prior
to the expiry of current contracts April 30.
There was also evidence from Seyfi Tomar, a co-ordinator in the low-rise sector for Local 183, that in a conversation
with Carlos Dionisio he was told: “We built this union, and we have every right to tear it down.”
“The eight charged members have chosen to form and support a new organization,” wrote Stephens in
his ruling. “Having made that choice, they have ‘burned their bridges’, and they cannot now have a reasonable
expectation that they will be welcome as LIUNA members at any time in the future. Their actions amount to an irretrievable
act of abandonment of LIUNA and the privilege of membership in LIUNA.
“As a result, I do not believe there is any alternative penalty short of revocation of membership that
is reasonable, given all of the circumstances.”
February 5, 2007
Labour
Why OLRB ruled the way it did
Board releases decision on Loc. 183 trusteeship
IAN HARVEY
correspondent
TORONTO
The Ontario Labour Relations Board has released its written reasons for upholding the
imposition of trusteeship on the Universal Workers Union Local 183 by the parent Laborers International Union of North America
(LIUNA).
While the basic judgment was released June 12, the written reasons are more detailed and essentially say the
original report finding wrongdoing within the executive was the result of a fair process and that there was no need to retry
or re-adjudicate the issues.
Dan Randazzo, counsel for LIUNA, said they were “very happy with the reasons.”
“He upheld the Keller report and said the process had been fair,” he said. “That’s what
we said all along.”
In the 22-page document, OLRB vice-chair Norm Jesin said the issues between the warring factions of the Local
and parent had already been dealt with.
Citing a principle of law, estoppel, which holds issues already adjudicated should not be retried over, Jesin
ruled the internal finding of wrongdoing by Local 183 business manager Tony Dionisio and the executive and the subsequent
Canadian Independent Hearing Officer’s report which upheld the imposition of trusteeship, were arrived at through a
fair process.
Jesin, in effect, declined to be drawn into the controversies about what was done and whether it was reasonable
or unreasonable.
He merely relied on the process which had gone on before and relied on its integrity, sidestepping the controversy.
However, the areas Jesin did express concerns about have become moot.
“I was also concerned that there not be an unwarranted purge of former officers from membership of the
Local,” Jesin wrote.
“I do not think it is appropriate for the Board to micro manage this or any other trusteeship however,
I do think it would be beneficial if a decision on whether to suspend or expel any former officers of the Local be taken by
the successor executive that is elected by the membership. Obviously, there might be circumstances where the conduct of one
of the former officers might justify more immediate suspension or expulsion. In my view, it was appropriate for me to remain
seized to review any proposed suspensions or expulsions during the trusteeship, before they took place.”
Those purges took place almost immediately after the trustees took control, but last week, Randazzo said outside
of the executive “which I don’t think the OLRB would have issues with, there were only a handful of terminations
from the 80 or so agents.”
Jesin was also concerned that the Local 183 would not be able to send delegates to vote for a new LIUNA executive
at the September 2006 convention in Las Vegas and tried to ensure the democratic process prevailed.
However, the LIUNA electoral officer ruled the original slate of delegates had been improperly appointed and
that the process had run out of time by August.
Delegates were appointed but under the rules were not permitted to vote, effectively blocking Dionisio’s
plan to oppose LIUNA’s Canadian general manager Joe Mancinelli.
"There were only a handful of terminations from the 80 or so agents."
Dan Randazzo
LIUNA Lawyer
It was the issue of Mancinelli’s re-election which Local 183 argued was behind the conflict.
Randazzo said Jesin’s other concern there be an election of a new executive as soon as possible is being
addressed.
“We put forward a time-table to him in July and said it would take 12 to 18 months,” he said.
In the meantime, Daniel Avero and Durval Terceira have been appointed co-trustees.
|
 |
|
Trusteeship of local 'just'
Labour board rules for LIUNA
Misspending of funds, forging documents, conducting surveillance -- it sounds like an episode of The Sopranos, but it's
what executives of the biggest union local in North America were apparently doing right here in Toronto.
The Ontario Labour Relations Board ruled the Labourers' International Union of North America (LIUNA)
had "just cause" in putting the Toronto local under trusteeship after a hearing found it had violated its own rules.
"It is surely inconsistent with core values of LIUNA and Local 183 to expend union funds on surreptitious surveillance
conducted for the purpose of preserving the positions of those in power," the board's Norm Jesin wrote.
TRUSTEESHIP
"It is also inconsistent with those core values to approve the forgery of collective agreements," he stated. "I have found
that LIUNA has established just cause for the imposition of trusteeship."
An investigation was launched after members of Universal Workers Union Local 183, made up of 26,000 construction workers,
complained about the way their local was being run.
In June 2006, a hearing found executive members of the local engaged in questionable activities including misspending funds,
forging collective agreements to benefit from a subcontracting clause and spending over $340,000 for surveillance on members.
EXECUTIVES REPLACED
LIUNA put Local 183 under trusteeship and replaced the seven member executive.
LIUNA's legal counsel Dan Randazzo, said the head office is working toward lifting the trusteeship and restoring Local
183 to its members.
"We're ecstatic. The decision confirms the hearing process was fair," said Daniel Avero, co-trustee of Local 183.
"I have it (the ruling), but I can't comment on it because I haven't had a chance to look at it," said Tony Dionisio, who
has started another organization called the Canadian Construction Workers Union.
"We are very disappointed by the quality of the reasons for the decision issued by the labour board
... to support their ruling," said Brian Shell, a trade union lawyer representing Dionisio and the other former executives.
"I am of the opinion that the labour board has ... made several fundamental errors of law."
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
|
LIUNA Local 183's "best settlements ever" worth hundreds of millions of dollars over next three years; CAW raid a disastrous
failure TORONTO, May 2 /CNW/ - Members of Local 183 of the Labourers' Union have overwhelmingly ratified construction industry
collective bargaining settlements worth more than four dollars per hour in wage, benefit and pension increases over the
next three years. The settlements affect more than 25,000 of Local 183's members working in the major construction sectors,
from roads and utilities to residential and commercial buildings and other sectors. "These are the best settlements in
the 55-year history of our union, worth hundreds of millions of dollars to our members," said Local 183 Co-Trustees Durval
Terceira and Daniel Avero, who led the negotiations. "It's a lot of money but it has been - and will continue to be - well-earned.
Our members' skills and productivity are at all-time highs. Contractors have been doing very well over the past few years
and these settlements are recognition that they owe much of their profitability to the hard-working members of Local 183.
"The benefits of these settlements will reach deep into the communities our members live in. More money will flow into neighbourhood
businesses, more of our kids will have a chance to go to college or university, better benefits will keep everyone healthier
and larger pensions will mean more secure futures." The settlements also put the final nail in the coffin of the disastrous
attempt by the Canadian Auto Workers to raid Local 183. The CAW advanced a million dollars to the deposed former local business
manager, Antonio Dionisio, to set up the Canadian Construction Workers Union. As of April 30th, the end of the open season,
CCWU's ten full-time staff had managed to certify only nine members of Local 183. Dionisio had earlier this year publicly
predicted he would lure away 15,000 members, who would follow him into the CAW. "We feel bad for CAW members whose money
has been wasted by their irresponsible leadership," said Avero and Terceira. "Buzz Hargrove has been handing out wage and
contract concessions like candy to the auto industry. Now he has spent $110,000 of CAW funds for each new member brought in
by Dionisio's phony new union. The CCWU may be the only union in Canadian history that has more full-time staff than members.
It would be laughable if it weren't such a tragic waste of workers' money." LIUNA Local 183 is North America's largest construction-based
local union. It represents over 30,000 workers in the construction, manufacturing and service sectors. Its headquarters are
in Toronto with satellite offices in Barrie and Cobourg.
May 4, 2007
Labour
Local 183 signs new contract
TORONTO
Members of Local 183 of the Labourers’ Union have overwhelmingly ratified construction industry collective
bargaining settlements worth more than $4 per hour in wage, benefit and pension increases over the next three years.
The settlements affect more than 25,000 of Local 183’s members working in the major construction sectors,
from roads and utilities to commerial and residential buildings.
“These are the best settlements in the 55-year history of our union, worth hundreds of millions of dollars
to our members,” said Local 183 Co-Trustees Durval Terceira and Daniel Avero, who led the negotiations.
“It’s a lot of money but it has been — and will continue to be — well-earned. Our members’
skills and productivity are at all-time highs.
“Contractors have been doing very well over the past few years and these settlements are recognition that
they owe much of their profitability to the hard-working members of Local 183.
“The benefits of these settlements will reach deep into the communities our members live in. More money
will flow into neighbourhood businesses, more of our kids will have a chance to go to college or university, better benefits
will keep everyone healthier and larger pensions will mean more secure futures.”
Daniel Avero
The settlements also put the final nail in the coffin of the disastrous attempt by the Canadian Auto Workers
to raid Local 183.
The CAW advanced a million dollars to the deposed former local business manager, Tony Dionisio, to set up the
Canadian Construction Workers Union. As of April 30, the end of the open season, CCWU’s ten full-time staff had managed
to certify only nine members of Local 183.
Dionisio had earlier this year publicly predicted he would lure away 15,000 members, who would follow him into
the CAW.
“We feel bad for CAW members whose money has been wasted by their irresponsible leadership,” said
Avero and Terceira.
“Buzz Hargrove has been handing out wage and contract concessions like candy to the auto industry. Now
he has spent $110,000 of CAW funds for each new member brought in by Dionisio’s phony new union.
“The CCWU may be the only union in Canadian history that has more full-time staff than members. It would
be laughable if it weren’t such a tragic waste of workers’ money.”
DCN NEWS SERVICES
|
|
 |
|
|
|
CANADIAN CONSTRUCTION WORKERS' UNION
"Long live Bosses"
The Canadian labour movement should be lead by
CCWU in the face of governments, corporate and the social and economic concerns of all workers. Organizing
is destructive and divisive, also orginizing cost too much money to our allies(bosses). Raiding is great! Let us support,
make our corporate and their bosses grow.
|
|
|
 |