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Unemployed left behind study finds Unemployed auto workers being left behind by economic recovery, CAW study finds By Ellen van Wageningen, The Windsor Star June 7, 2010 Workers laid off from the auto industry are having a...

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Windsor #1 in Canada Unemployment... Again! In this file photo, an altered sign on County Rd. 20 near the Windsor Raceway welcomes motorists to Windsor. The "automotive" capital of Windsor has been changed to the "unemployment" capital...

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Precarious work' trend dominates Windsor's new economy scroll to the bottom to read my rant on a portion of this article Temporary, contract and seasonal jobs with no benefits By Craig Pearson, The Windsor Star May 29, 2010 // // = 460) { imgBox.className...

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Fish Plant Workers Fret Over EI Shortfall Fish-plant workers in northeastern New Brunswick are worried that they will not have enough hours to qualify for employment insurance this year after only four weeks into the crab season. The Department...

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Breast cancer patients face huge financial burden -... The Canadian Breast Cancer Network surveyed more than 400 women with a breast cancer diagnosis and found that 80 per cent said they had experienced a financial blow of some kind due to their cancer. Photograph...

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Unemployed left behind study finds

Posted on : 07-06-2010 | By : admin | In : Uncategorized

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Unemployed auto workers being

left behind by economic recovery,

CAW study finds

By Ellen van Wageningen, The Windsor Star June 7, 2010

Workers laid off from the auto industry are having a tough time finding new jobs, even with ongoing support from their union, former employers and government, according to a study released Monday by the Canadian Auto Workers.

“Workers victimized by the financial crisis are now being left behind by the so called recovery,” said CAW president Ken Lewenza, who pointed to automotive Windsor’s stubbornly high unemployment rate of 12.7 per cent as an example.

The ongoing study is following 260 CAW members in the Toronto area who lost their jobs at the start of the recession and have been assisted by worker adjustment centres supported by the union, their former employers and the province. There are four such centres in Windsor.

The study started with Chrysler workers laid off from the Brampton assembly plant and was expanded to include others from two auto parts plants — one in Kitchener and the other in Scarborough.

Only 24 per cent had found jobs when they were interviewed between March and October 2009. Of those, 70 per cent are doing part-time, temporary or less secure work.

While the adjustment centres are helping workers through what many described as the overwhelming experience of trying to find a job in the current economy, more income and training support is needed, said lead researcher Sam Vrankulj, of McMaster University.

“When the jobs aren’t around you have to retrain for completely different jobs,” said David Robertson, CAW director of work organization and training. “Right now workers don’t get the requisite support. (Employment insurance) runs out, and the Ontario Second Career (program) isn’t sufficient to get them into the programs they need.”

The CAW is calling for employment insurance payments to continue for as long as workers are retraining and more provincial support for training programs.

The task has been daunting with 550,000 full-time manufacturing jobs lost since 2002, Lewenza said.

“When there are jobs to go to and the supports to get there, laid off workers are pretty good about making the transition,” he said. “We’ve seen production workers move to other plants in the manufacturing sector. We’ve seen autoworkers become chefs, factory workers, shift to health care; workers in engine plants become dental hygienists; warehouse workers become truck drivers; production workers become teachers. We’ve seen skilled trades workers move from industry to construction. We’ve seen people go back to school to get their degrees. But we’ve also seen workers face obstacles that are simply too big to overcome.”

To see the CAW study go to the union’s website, www.caw.ca, and click on research in the services/departments section. The study can be downloaded in a pdf format: http://www.caw.ca/en/8996.htm


Windsor #1 in Canada Unemployment… Again!

Posted on : 04-06-2010 | By : admin | In : Uncategorized

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In this file photo, an altered sign on County Rd. 20 near the Windsor Raceway welcomes motorists to Windsor. The "automotive" capital of Windsor has been changed to the "unemployment" capital of Canada.

In this file photo, an altered sign on County Rd. 20 near the Windsor Raceway welcomes motorists to Windsor. The “automotive” capital of Windsor has been changed to the “unemployment” capital of Canada.

Photograph by: Dan Janisse, The Windsor STar

WINDSOR, ONt. — Windsor’s unemployment rate rose marginally in May from 12.6 per cent to 12.7 per cent and remains the highest in the country, according to figures released this morning by Statistics Canada.

Unemployment rates for the rest of Ontario include Oshawa, 9.6 per cent; Toronto, 9.5; Greater Sudbury, 8.9; St. Catharines-Niagara, 8.8; London, 8.6; Kitchener, 8.2; Hamilton, 7.8; Ottawa, 6.0; Kingston, 5.5 and Thunder Bay, 5.4.

The lowest rate among the 27 cities listed by StatsCan was recorded in Regina at 4.8 per cent.

The national rate remained unchanged at 8.1 per cent. The country gained 24,700 jobs while more Canadians entered the labour market in search of jobs.

Precarious work’ trend dominates Windsor’s new economy

Posted on : 29-05-2010 | By : admin | In : Uncategorized

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scroll to the bottom to read my rant on a portion of this article

Temporary, contract and seasonal jobs with no benefits

By Craig Pearson, The Windsor Star May 29, 2010

Gary Dufour displays job postings at the CAW Local 1973 on Walker Road on May 27, 2010.

Gary Dufour displays job postings at the CAW Local 1973 on Walker Road on May 27, 2010.

Photograph by: Jason Kryk, The Windsor Star

WINDSOR, Ont. — After working 29 years at the same auto parts plant, making $30 an hour with great benefits, Gary Dufour suddenly faced his hardest job yet — finding one.

Dufour, put out of work when the Lear seat-manufacturing plant on Lauzon Road closed down, soon discovered that hitting a job market where even potential Walmart greeters must submit resumes is its own type of hell.

“At first it felt like a vacation, but then you start getting a little antsy,” Dufour recalled. “You don’t feel good about yourself. So I said, I’m going to look for work. And I was shocked.

“The jobs aren’t there.”

Over the next year and a half, Dufour applied for 10 jobs for minimum wage, but never even landed an interview.

He lost his good-paying auto parts job — he had earned almost $80,000 one year, thanks to loads of overtime — in June 2008. He did not work again until February this year. His new career: detailing cars for $10.25 an hour a few days a week.

Dufour’s lucky. He has a pension, a strong relationship with his wife Debbie, who works, and takes pride in making cars shine at Degraw Automotive.

But many people do not enjoy the here-and-there gigs they manage to land.

The CAW will hold an open workshop in Windsor on Sunday to highlight the growing trend of so-called “precarious work” — neither permanent nor full-time — which it calls disturbing.

Dufour, who also volunteers one day a week at the CAW Local 1973 adjustment office for laid-off workers, knows first-hand the trials of precarious work.

He sees members go through depression, stress and financial difficulties — including losing homes — which can affect entire families.

“You have this mental picture of your life — a good job, home, pension, retirement — and then it all changes,” said the 49-year-old father of two grown children.

“There’s a feeling of worthlessness and loss.”

Many mature job seekers today can’t believe they must take minimum-wage part-time work. Or temporary work. Or contract work. Or seasonal work. Or on-call work. Or self-employment. Or even two jobs that add up to less than one.

“It’s a growing trend and it’s just scary,” said Dino Chiodo, president of the Windsor & District Labour Council, who helped arrange the Precarious Work Workshop Sunday at the CAW Local 444 hall on Turner Road. “People like me look out and say, ‘What are my kids going to have at the end of the day?’”

Chiodo said as the economy continues to wreak havoc globally, and in particular in car-centric Windsor, he foresees more and more people facing the same crisis — the lack of stable employment.

“People can’t find work and are grasping at straws,” Chiodo said. “They’re working absurd hours for low wages to make ends meet. It’s noble, but we need good jobs to get people working.”

According to Statistics Canada, there were some 130,000 full-time jobs in the Windsor area in 2000. As of last year, it had fallen to 115,700. Meanwhile, in the last decade unstable work has risen.

Ten years ago, about 27,000 part-time jobs existed in the greater Windsor area. Last year there were 35,000. In the same period, we went from less than 15,000 self-employed people in Windsor to more than 17,000.

In 2000, the local unemployment rate was 5.4. Last year it was 13.8 per cent.

Though the precarious work phenomenon is particularly pronounced in Windsor, it is mirrored across Canada.

“Part of the problem has certainly been globalization,” said Alan Hall, director of labour studies at the University of Windsor. “It has made the labour market much more competitive, which has pushed firms to seek savings in whatever area they can. It’s also a function of the changes in technology and changes in the nature of work.”

More work can be done at home, for instance, by people classified as self-employed. But these people, Hall argues, are really just poorly paid employees without benefits or even an office from which to work.

“A key part of this is an emphasis on flexibility and reduced obligations,” Hall said. “On the whole, it’s a very bad trend for society. The insecurity itself means enormous amounts of problems for workers in terms of stress and strain.”

Hall believes the trend also forces wages down.

“The more insecure workers are, the less they are able to negotiate — individually or collectively — reasonable conditions,” said Hall, who attended this week in Hamilton a conference on precarious work, an older academic term gaining cachet among unions who want to make citizens aware of the direction society is taking. “It’s also about exercising more control over workers.”

Hall said labour laws must change to provide more protection for those conducting precarious work.

Some people, however, consider the trend away from full-time hours a good thing.

“If you’re in an industry where there’s a lot of cyclical demand for your goods, where things can go up and down, where government policy abroad can change things instantly, where demand for your goods can collapse, then you probably want a more flexible workforce,” said Colin Busby, policy analyst with the C.D. Howe Institute think-tank. “You’re seeing a much more diverse workforce, seemingly a more resilient one, and more and better jobs.”

As bad as the unemployment rate in Canada is during this recession, he said, it actually ran a little higher in recessions in the ’80s and ’90s.

Furthermore, Busby noted that corporations still hire significantly more full-time employees than non-full-time. Plus, he said, at least part of the reason corporations hire more part-time people — a trend happening for perhaps the last three decades, but speeding up in recent years — is because that’s what many people want. More people seek higher education today, and therefore need to fit jobs around classes.

Plus, we’re shifting from a manufacturing economy to a service economy.

Busby also thinks that Canada’s employment insurance system encourages seasonal workers.

He said it should change so that workers need more hours to collect EI, but can remain on it longer while they look for work.

Dufour, however, knows job hunting these days is no easy task.

“It’s so competitive now,” said Dufour, who posts jobs at a CAW adjustment centre and says he routinely has to explain to stunned laid-off applicants that they likely must accept minimum wage jobs for only a few hours a week. “It’s crazy tough.

“There are opportunities out there, but you have to be patient.”

Hi there,  I don’t usually do this but I have to comment on the underlined part of the article just above.  The article in and of itself is great and I think Craig Pearson did a wonderful job of shining some light on this issue of precarious work.  Let’s face it folks, Precarious work ties right into our EI system and the fact that it is in dire need of change, but not the change that Mr. Busby from C.D. Howe is suggesting, is all to clear.  To make it more difficult to collect EI does nothing at all for the unemployed.  In fact, saying that more hours are required to collect EI is a slap in the face to all workers who have contributed to the system for years.  What insurance system do you know of that you pay premiums into but cannot use.  The fact is, EI is needed now more than ever in this country and especially by those that fall into precarious working conditions and cannot climb out of it.  It’s simple, if more hours are needed to qualify for benefits but you cannot find long term employment and it is mostly seasonal, guess what?  You will never qualify and therefore never receive any benefits at all.  Mr. Busby slyly words it to make you think this is a good thing, that maybe the fund would grow as it most likely would, people would continue to pay into it and never be able to access it for help.  We might as well say that car insurance will no longer cover accidents or personal injury, now what would the point of that be?

Thanks for reading my little rant!

Wayne


Fish Plant Workers Fret Over EI Shortfall

Posted on : 29-05-2010 | By : admin | In : Uncategorized

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Fish-plant workers in northeastern New Brunswick are worried that they will not have enough hours to qualify for employment insurance this year after only four weeks into the crab season.

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans cut this year’s crab quota by 63 per cent to conserve stocks and a month into the season 98 per cent of this year’s quota has been caught.

The drastic cut to the snow crab quota means the plants on the Acadian peninsula have less crab to process and fewer hours for the region’s 2,500 fish plant employees to work.

Blondine Savoie, a union organizer, said few workers will have enough hours to qualify for employment insurance because of the quota reduction.

‘If you don’t have your hours in between the two seasons, the crab and the herring, you end up being like in a black hole … where you got no money coming in.’— Gary White, union representative

Savoie said the federal government must come to the assistance of the fish-plant workers because they are being impacted by their decision.

“The government is going to have to come and help the workers. They’re the ones who is controlling all the whole fishery,” Savoie said.

“They’re the control on that. They cut it down, what are they going to do with the people that are unemployed? People that want to work? People do want to work.”

Gaetane Paulin, a northern fish-plant worker, said she is stressed about finding work for the rest of the season. She said it will be difficult to fill the void that will be left when hours at the plant she works at in Caraquet dry up.

She’ll travel to Cap-Pelé in southeastern New Brunswick in August to work in the herring season.

But Paulin said she doesn’t expect to get enough hours to qualify for employment insurance despite working in the two different communities.

Other workers will have a couple more weeks of work processing crab from Nova Scotia.

‘Black hole’ for workers

The number of hours required for a person to work in order to qualify for employment insurance benefits varies on the region a person is living. According to the federal Department of Human Resources and Skills Development, workers in northeastern New Brunswick must work 455 hours before they can qualify for regular employment insurance benefits.

Gary White, a union representative, said hundreds of workers are in the same situation as Paulin.

“If you don’t have your hours in between the two seasons, the crab and the herring, you end up being like in a black hole … where you got no money coming in,” White said.

The provincial government has one program to help fish-plant workers find similar jobs in other parts of the province and another that focuses on re-training.

The northern fish-plant workers say they’ll need far more help than that.

Breast cancer patients face huge financial burden – say – reform EI system to help

Posted on : 29-05-2010 | By : admin | In : Uncategorized

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The Canadian Breast Cancer Network surveyed more than 400 women with a breast cancer diagnosis and found that 80 per cent said they had experienced a financial blow of some kind due to their cancer.

The Canadian Breast Cancer Network surveyed more than 400 women with a breast cancer diagnosis and found that 80 per cent said they had experienced a financial blow of some kind due to their cancer.

Photograph by: Jenelle Schneider, Calgary Herald

OTTAWA — On top of their physical challenges, breast cancer patients bear a huge financial burden and the federal government should reform employment-insurance benefits to help lift it, a new report says.

According to the Canadian Breast Cancer Network, the financial consequences of a breast-cancer diagnosis can be as stressful as the disease itself, and while women may survive the cancer, they could be struggling with the financial impact for the rest of their lives.

“This groundbreaking report firmly positions breast cancer as an economic as well as a health issue,” said Cathy Ammandolea, president of the advocacy group. She presented its findings Thursday at a news conference on Parliament Hill.

A survey of more than 400 women who had been diagnosed with breast cancer in the past five years found that 80 per cent had experienced some kind of financial hardship from the disease. Losing income because of time off work for treatments and recovery, plus related out-of-pocket expenses means a woman’s breast cancer diagnosis can be a “double whammy” for her and her family, the group said.

The household income of respondents dropped by an average of $12,000; 44 per cent said they used savings to cover expenses and 27 per cent went into debt. Sixteen per cent reported losing their jobs, while others had to quit or go on disability leave because the side-effects of treatment, fatigue and pain prevented them from doing their work.

Linda Glasier, a nurse for 35 years, is one of those women.

“I had to leave my job because I knew I physically would be unable to continue it,” said the resident of Medicine Hat, Alta., who has been battling breast cancer for the past two years. “That was difficult to give up.”

When the 56-year-old quit her job, she lost her insurance benefits, which meant using other means to cover costs.

Drugs taken outside of hospital settings are not always covered by public health plans, so patients either pay out-of-pocket or through private insurance, if they have it. Wigs, prosthetics, child care, and even paying for parking at health-care centres were also cited as extra financial costs by the women surveyed.

“You assume that everything will be covered and you find out it isn’t. It’s a shock,” said Glasier. “You have to go into your savings, it puts a burden on the whole family.”

For breast-cancer patients in rural areas, where chemotherapy and radiation treatments and cancer specialists may not be available, the costs are often even higher.

Lorna Marshall, a college teacher from Nelson, B.C., had to travel hundreds of kilometres to Kelowna and Vancouver for treatments during her two battles with breast cancer.

She was first on sick leave from her job, then short-term disability, and now she’s off work indefinitely. Marshall’s doctor is worried she could easily pick up infections in the classroom but she has her own concerns about returning to work.

“My memory has been severely impacted,” said Marshall, referring to what some patients call “chemo brain.”

“I have a big fear about going back into the classroom because of what I forget.”

A number of women surveyed who did return to work said they could not return to the same position, or salary, that they had before their illness.

The Canadian Breast Cancer Network says helping women cope with the economic costs, and facilitating their re-entry into the workforce is not only good for the patient, but for the entire economy. Making improvements on those two fronts will mean breast-cancer survivors can better contribute to national productivity and be less dependent on the social safety net, the group’s president said.

During meetings with parliamentarians Thursday, Glasier, Marshall and others from the organization pushed several proposals, including the idea of reforming the EI system to extend sickness benefits.

Currently, those eligible for EI can receive benefits for as long as 15 weeks, but the group says that barely gets a woman through one surgery let alone rounds upon rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, which can last as long as a year for some women. Eligibility criteria, the amount paid and the length of EI coverage should all be enhanced.

They are also calling for changes to the compassionate care benefit for family caregivers, better drug coverage, more support for child care and travel expenses, and help for self-employed women.

The group is trying to assemble a task force involving representatives from the federal and provincial governments, the insurance industry, labour unions, large employers and others to try and make some concrete changes.

About 22,000 Canadian women are diagnosed with breast cancer every year and thousands more find out they have cancer of a different kind. They are bearing similar financial burdens to the ones described in the report, says the group, and need the same assistance.

© Copyright (c) Canwest News Service