«

»

Oct 26

Made in the USA documentary critiques Hudak’s plans for a low-wage Ontario

September 20, 2013

LONDON, ONTARIO – The Ontario Public Service Employees Union has chosen  the sidelines of the Ontario PC Convention as the right venue to premier a new  documentary about Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak’s plan to bring American-style  labour laws to Ontario.

The embattled Tory leader is under siege from disgruntled  elements in his own party going into this weekend’s policy convention in London,  Ontario.

He also has the Ontario labour movement gearing up for a fight  over his proposal to enact a U.S.-style “right-to-work” law if he is elected  Premier in the next election.

The OPSEU-funded documentary called Made in the USA: Tim Hudak’s plan to cut your wages was  produced by respected journalist and documentary filmmaker Bill Gillespie, who  takes viewers on a road trip through Michigan, the most recent U.S. state to  adopt the anti-union legislation, to South Carolina, which introduced it in  1954.

“The kind of labour legislation Tim Hudak is proposing will not  boost Ontario’s economy and will not reduce unemployment,” said OPSEU President  Warren (Smokey) Thomas. “It will, however, reduce wages for union and non-union  workers alike and continue the rapid erosion of the middle class. We produced  this film because we want a wide audience to understand exactly what Hudak has  in store for Ontarians should we ever be silly enough to let him near the  Premier’s chair.”

Right-to-work laws, known in union circles as “free rider” laws,  allow individuals in unionized workplaces to receive the benefits of union  representation without paying the dues that make those benefits possible. In  Canada, such laws would run counter to an historic 1946 ruling by Supreme Court  Justice Ivan Rand. In the U.S., in contrast, the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 rolled  back union-friendly laws from the Roosevelt era and permitted right-to-work laws  in states that chose to adopt them.

“Tim Hudak says he wants to ‘modernize’ Ontario laws, but rather  than taking us into the future his proposals would send us back to the Great  Depression,” said Thomas. “Weakening unions would sap consumer spending at a  time when consumer debt is at an all-time high and low-income employment is on  the rise. And poor workers make poor customers.”

“What Hudak is proposing is a weak economy in which the low  wages of workers subsidize the high profits of employers,” he said. “That’s not  what we want for Ontario, and it’s not what we want for the next generation.”

English with closed captioning: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pbrxe3X04OE&feature=youtu.be Note: To view video with closed captioning, click on the cc button at the bottom of the video  and choose “closed caption”

Français (sous-titres): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pbrxe3X04OE&feature=youtu.be Pour mettre les sous-titres, cliquez  sur « cc » en bas de l’écran et choisissez « Français »

 

For more information: Warren (Smokey) Thomas (613) 329-1931 (cell) Bill Gillespie (647) 786-4332 (cell)

– See more at: http://www.opseu.org/madeinusamovie/video-1.htm#sthash.PacKJwmB.dpuf