Dozens rally in support of Hearing Society workers in Windsor - Action News
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Windsor

Dozens rally in support of Hearing Society workers in Windsor

CUPE held a rally in support of striking workers at the Canadian Hearing Society in Windsor on Friday. Unionized staff there been off the job since March 6.

Bargaining continues with striking CUPE members off the job since March 6

CUPE holds a rally for striking workers outside the Canadian Hearing Society in Windsor on Friday. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

Dozens of people picketed outside the Canadian Hearing Society in Windsor Friday to support striking workers at the service provider for deaf and hearing impaired Ontarians.

Unionizedworkers at the Hearing Society have been offthe job since March 6. That's meant services for deaf and hearing impaired people across the province have been harder to come by, impacting their ability toaccess services such assign languageinterpreters formedical appointments.

Members of CUPE 2073 rallied on their picket line at the Canadian Hearing Society in Windsor on Friday. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

Friday's rally was organized by CUPEandattracted fellow union members attending a municipal workers conference at CaesarsWindsor this weekend.

Courtney Cockburn (left) interprets MPP Lisa Gretzky's words into sign language at a rally in support of striking workers at the Canadian Hearing Society. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

Current and former clients of the Hearing Society showed up tosupport the service providers they have been unable to access since the beginning of the month.

"I came all the way from Chatham today to be here for support," said Michelle Barron through an interpreter.

Michelle Barron is a former board member for the Canadian Hearing Society in Chatham, and travelled from there for Friday's rally. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

She is deaf anda former board member of the Canadian Hearing Society for Chatham. Barronsaidthe hour-long drive to attend the rally was worth it after years of both working with the Society and accessing its services.

"I can't just sit at home and watch this happening," said Barron. "It's not just the interpreting but audiologists... all the staff at Canadian Hearing Society."

In a statement, management at the Canadian Hearing Society said negotiationscontinued on Friday. Both CUPE and the CHS say they will not comment publicly on how things are going at the bargaining table.

CHS sign language interpreter Courtney Cockburn is a picket captain on the CUPE picket line. (Rob Heydari/CBC)

On the picket line, spirits remain high.

"We're still here and we're still strong and we'll continue to be here as long as needed," said striking sign language interpreter and picket captain Courtney Cockburn.