Your Public Post Office Delivers Campaign / Bulletin
2005-2008/386
Canada Post recently conducted a focus group with some of our Winnipeg members but it didn’t end up being
terribly focused. They were looking for ways to focus our members on helping management update their address
management process for new sequencing equipment. This is part of their Modern Post initiative.
Canada Post doesn’t have the right to do this communications end-run around the union, but as they say, watch
what you ask for.
Instead of giving the employer quick and dirty ways to update changes in addresses, union observers
(attending on a without prejudice basis) said the seven members took more than two and a half hours to
explain the reality of their routes to management. Members talked at length about householder headaches,
forced overtime and unaccounted growth while the employer just wanted to hear about accurate address
information.
Who chooses postal worker representatives?
An employer-lead focus group violates the exclusive rights and responsibilities of CUPW to represent
members’ opinions and their suggestions about working conditions.
Arbitrators Dulude and Blouin have twice slapped Canada Post on the wrist for violating the collective
agreement and the Canadian Labour Code which grants CUPW this exclusive role. We choose who speaks
to the boss about our work, not the boss.
At national consultation we suggested a way to help CPC get more accurate addresses in a way that respects
the union’s democratic and collective agreement structures and processes. We would select union
representatives to give information to the employer.
Of course, the union would canvas members’ opinions and involve our members in this process.
Fix our walks first
During and after the focus group, the union explained that most of the problems that were raised have been
in the grievance process for years and need to be addressed.
The employer has to fix our walks before we help them fix the inevitable glitches attached to their new
equipment.
QWL is QWL is QWL
The employer’s regional forums and focus groups are recent examples of Quality of Work Life
(QWL)par excellence. QWL are management initiatives that try to convince workers that they
benefit when the corporation benefits, so management, not the union, is in a better position to answer
questions about who wins, who loses and who decides future work.
I encourage you to (re)watch the QWL video we sent out in early January and ask yourself the same
questions. You might think differently about Canada Post’s regional forums and focus groups – you’ll probably
say the “engagement” is off.