8-week strike 'the only resort,' say McGill TAs fed up with wages, working conditions - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:20 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

8-week strike 'the only resort,' say McGill TAs fed up with wages, working conditions

McGill University teaching assistants want better wages and better working conditions. They've just launched an eight-week strike in hopes of putting pressure on the institution.

'Low ball after low ball,' teaching assistant says of McGill offers

A person.
Dallas Jokic, a teaching assistant at McGill, says a strike appears to be the only way to get the school to get serious in negotiations. (Sandra Hercegova/CBC)

One day into an eight-week strike, the union representing McGill University teachingassistants (TA) hopes a return to the negotiation table Tuesday is a step toward a dealthat includes higherwages and better working conditions for its 1,600 members.

Negotiations have been ongoing since last September. Earlier this month, union members voted 87.5 per cent in favour of a strike mandate, sensing that it was the only way to be heard.

"We've seen a lot of resistance from McGill. They've been giving us low ball after low ball," said Dallas Jokic, a TA in the philosophy department and a member of the bargaining committee forthe Association of Graduate Students Employed at McGill(AGSEM).

"They've done nothing to address the problem of inflation or higher TA wages in other schools in Canada."

People protesting
On Monday, protesters gathered to shed light on a number of issues, including the pay gap between TAs at McGill and those working in other schools. (Sandra Hercegova/CBC)

On Monday, union members gathered in front of McGill, ringing bells, waving flags and brandishing signs to get their points across.

One of those signs was meantto illustrate the pay gap between teaching assistants at McGill and those working for other schools. Union members have stated thatMcGillTAs make $33.03 per hour and that hourly wages for their counterpartsin other schools are north of $46.

The eight-week strike comes on the back half of the winter semester, which is leaving AidenMehak, who's also a TA at the university, feeling "conflicted" about the effects it could have on students.

But Mehak also believes TAs have no other choice but to strike.

"I would love to be there for my students and students that are graduating are quite concerned that this will interfere with their graduation," they said.

"[But] I think is really the last resort and the only resort at this point."

A person.
Aiden Mehak says TAs are often forced to work unpaid overtime hours. (Sandra Hercegova/CBC)

The union alsosaysMcGill is reducing the number of hours included in the contracts of TAs.

By reducing the number of hours in a contract from 180 to 150, for example, TAs say they're forced to choose betweengivingless support to students or working unpaid hours.

During Monday's protest, one protesterheld a sign that read "No more free hours."

The union wants the hours incontract to be proportionate to the number of students a TA has.

WATCH | CBC's Sandra Hercegova breaksdown labour dispute between McGill and TAs:

Why McGill TAs are on the picket line

6 months ago
Duration 0:50
After six months of negotiations and what they call zero progress, teaching assistants at McGill University are on strike. They say they're facing cuts to their hours forcing some to take other jobs.

TAs want their work to be valued, professor says

According to Barry Eidlin, an associate professor of sociology at McGill, the labour dispute is connected to a concept he describes as "the corporatization of the university" which he says involves relying on more casual workers like teaching assistants to carry an increasingly heavy workload in an effort to maximize profits.

"They do a lot of the essential work at the university. Many undergrads have stronger relationships with their teaching assistants than their professors because they are the ones they interact with most closely," Eidlin said.

"What the TAs are asking for, why they are on the picket lines, is for their work to be valued."

Eidlinsays he hopes Tuesday's bargaining session moves negotiations forwardand thatit's time for the university to begin negotiating in good faith.

In a statement, the university said it "deeply values the contributions of teaching assistants and recognizes their right to labour action within the parameters of the law."

"McGilllooks forward to continuing discussions with the union for the renewal of the collective agreement," the statement reads.

"The university is continuing its operations, prioritizing themeasures necessary to ensure that students are not unduly affected by the labour action."

With files from Sandra Hercegova and La Presse Canadienne