Sabtu, 12 Agustus 2023

Stefanson takes shots at union, NDP in liquor workers' strike - Winnipeg Free Press

Premier Heather Stefanson climbed into the ring and threw a few punches at the union representing striking liquor workers Friday, just hours before all retail outlets in the province — save for two in Winnipeg — locked the doors for the weekend.

It marked the first time the premier publicly waded into the increasingly bitter battle between Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries and about 1,400 members of the Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union over a new collective agreement.

Stefanson accused the union of “politicizing” the dispute and the NDP of standing in the way of progress as the strike dragged into its fourth day.

“I don’t think that they are telling their members what is really on the table for Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries,” the premier said at an unrelated news conference.

“There is a 15 to 25 per cent increase in their wages over four years, it’s on the table. It’s on the Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries website. Go there.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES<p>
Premier Heather Stefanson accused the union of “politicizing” the dispute and the NDP of standing in the way of progress as the strike dragged into its fourth day.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES

Premier Heather Stefanson accused the union of “politicizing” the dispute and the NDP of standing in the way of progress as the strike dragged into its fourth day.

“I don’t think we should be politicizing this. Manitobans want to have access to (products from Liquor Marts).”

Her comments echo those made by MLL president Gerry Sul, who earlier in the week accused MGEU of “shielding (members) from all the details.”

The union responded to Sul’s remarks, explaining that its members have been encouraged to seek out MLL’s information, and argued the 24.55 per cent wage increase ladder described on MLL’s website would apply only to seasonal workers and new hires, who make up less than 20 per cent of the workforce and, then, only if those people remained employees for four years.

Under the current proposal, the union said, most permanent long-term members would get a four-year total wage increase of eight or nine per cent.

“I’ve spent many, many hours on the picket lines over this last little while, and I can tell you our members are well aware what the offer is, and they’re really fighting for fairness,” MGEU president Kyle Ross said Friday.

“I don’t know how you would want to make political gains off of a strike and off of these families who have all this stress and all these issues going on.”

Stores closed

While five Winnipeg Liquor Marts and two outside the city have been open since the provincewide strike began Tuesday, even fewer will be open this weekend.

While five Winnipeg Liquor Marts and two outside the city have been open since the provincewide strike began Tuesday, even fewer will be open this weekend.

Just two Winnipeg Liquor Marts — the Crestview location at 3393 Portage Avenue and the St. Vital Square Liquor Mart at 827 Dakota Street — will be open from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, according to a MLL spokesperson. All rural Liquor Marts will be closed Saturday, and all Liquor Marts in Manitoba will be closed Sunday.

Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries is also converting two of its locations, the Eastwinds Liquor Mart at 1530 Regent Avenue and the Brandon Victoria Liquor Mart at 1015 Victoria Avenue to commercial-only stores. Starting Friday at Eastwinds and Aug. 15 in Brandon, these locations will not be open to the public and shoppers will have to provide licensee identification.

According to the Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries website (which currently lists the Crestview and St. Vital Square locations as closed on Saturday) the Crestview, Garden City Square, Grant Park, Hargrave at Ellice and St. Vital Square locations in Winnipeg will be open 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays next week, as will the Brandon South location. The Thompson Liquor Mart will operate at reduced hours from Tuesday to Friday.

The Crestview, Garden City Square, Grant Park, Hargrave at Ellice and St. Vital Square locations in Winnipeg are open Friday from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m., along with the Brandon Victoria Avenue location and the Thompson Liquor Mart.

MLL workers have been without a contract since March 2022 and want raises in line with those obtained by Premier Heather Stefanson and her cabinet — 3.3 per cent in 2023 and 3.6 per cent in both 2024 and 2025.

MLL is offering two per cent a year over four years, and raising the hourly starting wage $2.38 above the province’s minimum wage.

The current starting hourly wage for MLL workers is $14.91, increasing to $15.30 in October in line with the raise in minimum wage. The promised bump for entry-level workers would increase the starting wage to $17.68 hourly this year and by March 2025, the starting wage would be $18.57, when a one per cent recruitment and retention adjustment is applied that year.

The last liquor-related labour dispute in the province was in October 1978, when the Manitoba Government Employees’ Association went on strike for seven weeks.

Stefanson also criticized the NDP’s decision to block proposed legislation earlier this year that would have expanded private liquor sales in the province.

“They stood in the way of that. We think that’s wrong,” she said. “And we’ll continue to stand up for the workers, we’ll continue to stand up for Manitobans when it comes to more access to to liquor and make it more convenient for them.”

NDP critic for Liquor and Lotteries Lisa Naylor said Stefanson’s Progressive Conservative government has a “clear agenda” to follow Alberta and Saskatchewan in privatizing Manitoba’s liquor industry.

“Maybe this is some way they’re trying to turn around, to get public sentiment on their side around privatization, although we certainly didn’t hear much support for that when the bills were in process (in the legislature),” Naylor said.

Although the province doesn’t appear poised to pursue a full privatization model, the strike has quickly become a campaign issue that could have negative impact on both the Tories and the NDP, said Christopher Adams, an adjunct professor in political studies at the University of Manitoba.

Manitobans will elect a new provincial government Oct. 3.

MIKE THIESSEN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS <p>
The Eastwinds Liquor Mart will only be open for commercial customers.
MIKE THIESSEN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

The Eastwinds Liquor Mart will only be open for commercial customers.

“If you’re a shopper in Fort Richmond and you want to buy your bottle of Wiser’s rye or some vodka, and yet again, you can’t buy what you’re looking to shop for, you might think, ‘Well, who’s responsible for this long strike?’” he said.

“And you say, the government, in part, is responsible because they haven’t interfered with it, but at the same time, one might say, the unions are supported by the NDP. It’s a cross-cutting issue, and the PCs might want to let this ride for a while.”

The longer the strike goes on, the more effect it will have when voters go to the polls, Adams said.

“I would say the agenda right now is mostly in the union’s favour, which is surprising to me, because with stores being closed, there are a lot of people who might not care about the issues,” he said.

“Now, the longer this takes to get resolved, the more the union might have less of a control over the dialogue.”

Meanwhile, some striking employees objected to comments posted publicly on a provincial government minister’s political campaign Facebook page earlier this week.

Consumer Protection and Government Services Minister James Teitsma blamed MGEU for what he described as a “needless strike” and responded to several comments posted by individuals on one of Teitsma’s unrelated posts.

One commenter, Tom Boomer, who said his wife is one of the employees currently on strike, asked whether the government would negotiate with MLL employees.

In response, Teitsma wrote: “(MLL) and MGEU should be negotiating right now. No one wants a strike except Kyle Ross and the NDP. This strike isn’t about negotiating for MGEU — it’s about a political objective.”

In a subsequent comment, the minister wrote, “Your wife is being used by MGEU to score political points.”

The employee, Jenn Boomer, told the Free Press she felt the minister’s comments lacked a sense of leadership and showed no empathy for the families of liquor workers.

“He made us out to be puppets,” she said.

Ross expressed frustration with Teitsma’s comments.

“I think it’s insulting to talk down to our members like this,” he said.

Teitsma’s office didn’t immediately respond Friday afternoon.

— With files from Danielle Da Silva and Katie May

malak.abas@freepress.mb.ca

Malak Abas

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2023-08-11 23:58:21Z
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