Ist Issue, May

B.C. LUMBER WORKER

From Page 1

“Stave Lake”

sideration, and were responsible

for the long-drawn-out discus-
sions.
Mainly, the individual griev-

ances resulted from the fact that
the seniority provisions of the
agreement had been disregarded,
in the placement of workers at
the various jobs as production re-
quirements fluctuated. At the
conclusion of the mediation con-
ferences, all parties agreed that
much of the trouble could have
heen averted by adherence to the
grievance procedure now provided
by the IWA contract.

Reinstatement Assured

All employees were reinstated
with full rights and_ privileges
under the agreement,

A number of employees who
had suffered loss of pay when de-
prived of seniority rights under
the contract were awarded retro-
active adjustment of pay.

One item in the terms of settl
ment provided for $60 retroactive
pay for distribution among mem-
bers of the Safety Committee. In
future the Company will pay for
every second meeting of this com-
mittee.

The seniority rules as in the
agreement will now apply to lay-
offs and any reduction of the
working force. Vacancies will
now be posted for four days, with
applications received in writing.
Future lay-offs will be discussed
with the Plant Committee. Emer-
gency conditions which interrupt
production will be broadcast over
the radio station one hour before
commencement of the shift.

IWA officials and crew mem-
bers expressed themselves as sat-
isfied with the outcome of the con-
ference and predicted that in fu-
ture employer-employee relations
would be on a much more satis-

factory and harmonious basis.

CLC Reverses
P.M's Ideas

By MORDEN LAZARUS

As he addressed the Canadian Labour Congress con-
vention, Prime Minister Diefenbaker’s voice was just as
“sweet” as it was during the election campaign but his line

was different.

Repeating his campaign talk about “vision” in the de-
velopment of Arctic areas, the P.M. added a few facets which
his electioneering didn’t reveal.

Nailing his flag to the mast of
free enterprise, the P.M. stated he
was for

1) a minimum of govern-
ment “interference”

2) wage restraint

3) confidence

4) more spending

Convention delegates had al-
ready expressed their opinions on
these points before the P.M. ar-
rived. Disturbed by the latest un-
employment figures, the highest
since 1940, the convention ap-
proved a statement of its Econ-
omic Policy Committee that urged
government action (or “interfer-

ence”),
“Our Government must re-
double its efforts to expand

exports, to increase public invest-
ment, to fill the gap left by the
fall in private investment, and to
raise consumer purchasing power.
It must reduce taxes still further;
it must raise unemployment in-
surance, old age security, family
allowances and public assistance.
It must set to work to bring our
social capital — schools, universi-
ties, hospitals, streets, roads, water
supply, sewage disposal and so
forth — up to the standards the
times demand and the Canadian
people deserve, It must be will-
ing to budget for deficits, and sub-
stantial deficits, as long as the re-
cession lasts,”

Delegates also said that con-
sumer spending cannot logically
be increased while unemployment
is so serious. Anticipating the
P.M.’s argument that the banks
are loaded with savings, speakers
from the floor pointed out that
699% of the workers of Canada

earned less than $3,000 a year and
these workers’ savings are negli-
gible.

Congress policy rebuffs Dief’s
policy by calling for

1) more government action

2) wage increases: instead of
“restraint”, to increase purchas-
ing power

3) full employment as the
only basis for genuine confi-
dence.

ICFTU

School
Opens

BRUSSELS (CPA)—Details
of the 1958 International School
of the International Confedera-
tion of Free Trade Unions have
been announced here. The
School opened April 27 at the
residential college of the German
trade union federation at Ober-
ursel, near Frankfurt,

The school will discuss the value
of all types of trade union educa-
tin conducted by the ICFTU at all
levels. On May 10 the students
will travel to Brussels to visit the
world exhibition and continue dis-
cussion at ICFTU headquarters
there. Emphasis in the second part
of the course will be placed on the
relationship between organiza-
tional and educational activities.

Since its formation, the ICFTU
has held International Schools in
Finland, France, India, Ghana,
Mexico and Canada, with a total
of 421 trade unionists from many

nations participating.

CLOTHES LTD.

Made-To-Measure

SUITS - SLACKS - JACKETS - TOPCOATS
“Union Hand Tailored”

Vancouver, British Columbia

Delegates
Display
Loyalty

WINNIPEG (CPA) — Dele-
gates to the Second Constitu-
tional Convention of the Cana-
dian Labor Congress here twice
demonstrated militant solidarity
in dealing with anti-union em-
ployers.

On the opening day the con-
vention proceedings were inter-
rupted as delegate Neil LeRoy
of the Canadian Council of Auth-
ors and Artists called on presi-
dent Jodoin to have the call letters
of anti-union radio station CKY
removed from a podium micro-
phone. Delegates cheered approv-
al as the offending letters were
removed. In support of LeRoy,
Walter Murdoch of the American
Federation of Musicians, Toronto,
charged that the anti-union sta-
tion was a “glorified juke box”
and that its disc jockeys were
“parasites.”

After an appeal by Jacob Clay-
man of the Amalgamated Clothing
Workers of America on behalf of
locked-out employees of Hyde
Park Clothing, Montreal, delegates
at lunch hour on Thursday peace-
fully picketed the men’s depart-
ment of the Hudson’s Bay store
here, carrying placards protesting
the store’s handling of Hyde Park
clothing.

Finances
Reported
Solvent

WINNIPEG (CPA) — Can-
adian Labor Congress finances
are “relatively satisfactory now,
secretary - treasurer Donald
MacDonald told delegates to
the CLC convention here dur-
ing his presentation of the Con-
gress financial report.

‘At December 31, 1957, the Con-
gress was in the black by $52,-
079.55 — a position which Mr.
MacDonald termed “more com-
fortable” than that of one year
previously, but yet “just four per
cent of revenue.”

“Both departmental and general
budgets were met,” he said. He
praised affiliates for co-operation
in submitting membership levies
promptly.

At the end of 1956, the Congress
showed an excess in return of ex-
penditure of only $4,715.04.

New Demands

The position expected for the
year 1958, secretary - treasurer
MacDonald told the delegates, was
not as good as the 1957 one. With
rising Congress expenses, trans-
fers of chartered locals to affili-
ates (offset to some degrees by
new organization), and, most im-
portant, a loss attributable to the
unemployment situation, the out-
look was not at all happy.

The surplus budgeted for 1958
is $11,000, he said. No increase
in per capita levies of seven cents
per member per month is contem-
plated,

However, the Congress planned
to start several trades departments
within the next year, and this
would require funds.

MacDonald considered a limit
of 10 cents per member per
month might be sufficient to fin-
ance the new Congress activities.

The united Congress, he said,
is far more “economical and ef-
fective than the two old bodies,”

ATTEND YOUR
UNION MEETINGS

REGULARLY /

We

Joe Morris
CLC Regional Vice-President

Representing B.C.

Ed. O’Connor
CLC Regional Vice-President

From Page 1

with business arising from. the
440-odd resolutions, and 141-page
Executive Council report, time
was taken to hear some noted
world labor leaders, and the Can-
adian Prime Minister.
P.M. Heard

“Despite some press reports
which appeared at the coast the
Prime Minister was received with
every courtesy. He made it the
occasion for some important an-

nouncements affecting employ-
ment in Canada.

“Fraternal visitors included,
a representative of the

President of the ICFTU, Arne
Gieger, together with Sir Alfred
Roberts, and W. B. Beard of the
British Trade Union Congress,
both members of the TUC Gen-
eral Council, Joseph Beirne, a
vice-president of the AFL-CIO,
represented that body at Winni-
peg. These speakers forcibly re-
minded us of the international
character of the labour movement,
and the importance of our inter-
national affiliations and objectives.
Unemployment

“Unemployment was declared to
be the Number One problem fac-
ing Canada today. Considerable
emphasis was given the resolution
dealing with this “bread and but-
ter” question.

“The convention called on the
Federal Government to implement
a comprehensive public works pro-
gram as an emergency measure to
steam a threatening economic re-
cession, This program, to be
worked out with provinces and
municipalities, should, in the opin-
jon of the convention, provide
work at union rates and under
union conditions, to aid in the
development of our natural re-
sources, to provide our children
with adequate school accommoda-
tion, to provide needed hospitals,
roads, streets, sewage disposal
plants, and other public facilities
urgently needed. All this, it was
urged should be conducted as to
help restore and maintain full em-
ployment throughout the year.

Wage Boosts Approved

“The Congress convention de-
clared its solid support of affili-
ates asking wage increases in cur-
rent negotiations, as such boosts
are needed to aid consumer pur-
chasing power, and counteract
recessionary trends,

“As one research director stated,
‘the year 1957 was a year in which
the gross national product reached
an all-time high, but was also the
period in which unemployment
started its rise to a very high
level. It was also a year in which
Canada experienced a decline in
per capita consumption of goods
and services. Many authorities —
and these include leaders like
President Eisenhower — and lead-
ing economists have been urging
the consumer to spend more. The

“Morris’

way to achieve that objective is
to put more money into people’s
pockets and to cut prices.”

“The convention expressed sup-
port of the Brotherhood of Loco-
motive Firemen and Enginemen
in the following terms, ‘to support
the BLFE in this vital question,
in a manner and to an extent to
be determined by the Executive
Council or Executive Committee,
and in consultation with the un-
ions representing operating and
non-operating railway employees.’

Two Unions Expelled

“Two affiliates were expelled
for raiding. Charges under the
Constitution’s no-raiding section
were brought against the 1,000-
member American Federation of
Technical Engineers, and the
13,000-member International Un-
ion of Operating Engineers. The
vote in favor of expelling the Op-
erating Engineers was a 999-239
count.

Wrecking Censured

“An employers’ organization
created to promote union-wreck-
ing ‘right to work’ legislation in
Canada, and called the Commit-
tee for Economic Rights and
Freedom was officially condemned
by the convention. The resolution
called on the incoming officers to
investigate the anti-labour union
activities of the group and take

any action that they might deem
necessary, including publicity and
representations to the Federal
Government.

“The convention adopted
recommendations by the Commit-
tee on International Affairs calling
for a minimum contribution to the
ICFTU International Solidarity
Fund of $100 thousand dollars in
the three-year period ending De-
cember 31, 1960, The amount will
be raised by voluntary per capita
contributions from CLC affiliates
in much the same manner as now
adopted by almost all LWA Local
Unions in this province.

Economic Aid Urged

“The delegates urged an effect-
ive ban on the testing and pro-
duction of existing stockpiles; ef-
fective international control and
inspection to implement this pol-
icy, an international agreement on
the regulation and control of
outer space, and disarmament in
the field of conventional weapons,
It was also proposed that Canada
should spend at least two hundred
million dollars a year as our con-
tribution to the Colombo Plan,
UN Technical Assistance, and
other economic development pro-
jects of the United Nations,

“I suggest to my fellow trade
unionists in this province, that
they give careful consideration
to the decisions reached at this
convention, for they hold the
key to pressing problems of the

day.