Laying Down Plans for the Future
February - March 2005
Editor’s note: The following article by Dan
Keeton from the Winter 2004 issue of Tradetalk, published
by the British Columbia and Yukon Territory Building
and Construction Trades Council, is reprinted below with
their permission.
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| Local 2 BC tilesetter Greg Yoong,
employed by Star Tile, laying floor tiles at the Concert
Properties’ site in southeast Vancouver. |
Greg Yoong expertly places another white tile on a bed
of latex adhesive that covers a section of floor in an
emerging apartment, turning bare, cold concrete into inviting
living space. The tilesetter is one of five bricklayers
and tilesetters working on the Concert Properties’ site
in east Vancouver, British Columbia.
Yoong was born and trained in Malaysia before moving to
Canada as a young journeyperson. He represents a trade
in danger of vanishing from the B.C. construction scene.
All those working this October morning are at least in
their later forties; two are actually over the retirement
age. The problem: there are too few new recruits to replace
them.
Their union [BAC Local 2 BC], a local created from a merger
of bricklayers and tilesetters, is aiming to turn that
around. Another feature these workers share is their firm
support of union membership. “You get better benefits,
the pension is better and the quality is better,” asserted
Yoong.
“Our company’s always been a union company
and it always will be,” added Robert Scodellar, affixing
patterned tiles to a bathroom wall. A 40-year veteran with
Star Tile, he decried the proliferation of “fly-by-nighter” non-union
firms. Some non-union tilesetters are good at their craft,
he conceded, “But I think we’re more professional.”
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| Member Steve Scyrup laying tile
in hallway. |
Like many of their counterparts in the construction industry,
those in the trowel trades have seen their share of troubles
during the bad old days that followed the attack on building
trades unions in the mid-’80s. The union sector was
hit hard by hostile governments and labour laws. The non-union
and anti-union sector displaced union trades workers on
increasingly larger building projects.
But with the recent amalgamation of the two trowel trades
into one bargaining unit, there are signs that things might
be getting a lot better.
Last year [2003], two locals of the International Union of Bricklayers and
Allied Craftworkers [BAC Locals 1 and 3 BC] merged into BAC Local 2. The new
local is the driving force behind a new trades training centre and is aggressively
seeking new members in a full-time organizing drive. These developments address
not only the future of the union, but of qualified trades training as well.
“Things certainly were different in the early ’80s.
We had the lion’s share of the construction market,” recalled
Rob Tuzzi, Local 2’s President. Expo ’86 and
the attack on building trades’ union jurisdiction
on the site by the Socred government of Bill Vander Zalm
changed everything. “After ’86, it was a steady
downhill ride.”
Non-union companies and those holding contracts with organizations
such as the Christian Labour Association of Canada (CLAC)
steadily encroached on former union-only work and even
sucked away union members who put their membership cards
in their shoes in order to keep working. But it wasn’t
merely unions without a solid membership base that suffered.
The future of the trades was also hard hit, resulting in
the alarming shortages of skilled trades workers today,
Tuzzi observed.
The non-union forces used the skills of the tradesworkers. “But
they didn’t reinvest in training, marketing and promotion.
The result today is a skills shortage.” That is now
translating into higher wage bills for those who profited
from the lower wages paid non-union workers, Tuzzi noted. “Those
remaining can demand higher wages, and that’s what’s
happening. They say, ‘Pay me two bucks an hour more
or I’ll go somewhere else.’ Maybe those employers
are starting to realize that a collective agreement is
a two-way street.”
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| Member Don Inverson laying tiles
in bathroom. |
The new local gets a dues remission break from their International
Union, and is using some of these resources for the new
centre run by the Trowel Trades Training Association. The
rest is being plowed into organizing.
The centre’s key purpose is to answer the crucial
need to produce qualified trades workers in an expanding — some
would say, exploding — construction industry where
demand is only going to intensify with the approaching
Winter Olympics in 2010. Right now, the average age in
the trowel trades is about 47 years old. The retirees are
starting to outnumber the apprentices.
The centre is a non-profit entity under the Societies
Act. It opened last January [2003] with overwhelming support
from all stakeholders in the construction industry. Financial
support and supplies poured in from union and non-union
contractors. Material and tool suppliers contributed some
$140,000 worth of goods. Retired members donated their
tools. While the local hopes that the quality of training
will also show the students the value of union membership, “It’s
not a union-only centre,” said Tuzzi. “It was
never set up that way.”
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| Member Bob Hurliman sizing cement
blocks for an elevator shaft. |
Prior to the centre’s opening, Kwantlen College
in Surrey was the sole source of training for the brick
and tile trades. The trouble was, “it wasn’t
able to meet the demand,” says Geoff Higginson, Local
2’s full-time organizer. There are too few spaces
available and the college course lacks the flexibility
the training centre is offering. “The skills assessment
and upgrading is open to our members at all times,” he
said. “We’re aiming for a continuous intake;
apprentices won’t be limited to a set five weeks
a year. We want to make the centre available for quick
training in handling new materials.”
For the tilesetting course, the centre charges $200 tuition
per term; each term involves 160 hours of classroom time
and 640 hours of on-the-job training. There is no charge
to potential apprentices who come to try out the tools
and see if the trade is a good fit for them. Higginson
related the recent case of a young woman who had sold tiles
for years and decided she’d like to try the trade. “We
had her on the saw, learning how cut a tile into a circle.” She
liked it. “We’ll find a company for her to
work for, and later she can start her training at the centre.”
Housed in the warehouse-like Painters’ building
in the shadow of the Patullo Bridge along Surrey’s
Fraser River waterfront, the centre offers training for
working with brick, terrazzo, marble, and tile. It’s
run by Local 2 Secretary-Treasurer and Training Coordinator
Guy Zecchini, who said his aim is to make training conditions
as much like real job situations as possible.
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| Organizer Geoff Higginson and
Secretary-Treasurer and Training Coordinator Guy Zecchini
at the training centre. |
In the real world, “all walls are not plumb, all
floors are not level,” Zecchini noted as he demonstrated
how to use various instruments of the trade, including
a plumb line and a water level (a water-filled transparent
plastic hose of narrow gauge). Both devices ensure walls
are level and tiles are properly lined up. The practice
construction area can accommodate up to 12 apprentices
who will train for five weeks in each of the three years
it takes to become a journeyperson.
Around the site are stacks of polished granite, with its
high density and resilience, and marble, with its porous
delicacy and flowing lines. Terrazzo panels are a mix of
cement, sand, and marble chips formed into a design. Zecchini
displays a student’s artistry depicting a deer in
a snowy clearing. “I’ve always thought that
to be a real trades worker, you should have a little artistic
flair,” said Zecchini.
This new centre replaces the former tilesetter training
facility set up in 1995 and allows the Local to expand
the scope of its training. But there are problems. Government
funding allows for only four months of operation per year.
And while employers are supposed to keep training apprentices
on the job, many of the non-union contractors use their
apprentices for general labouring. The result is that some
get frustrated and drop out, Zecchini said.
“In the old days, the job sites were 85 percent
union. There was lots of money around for training on the
job. It isn’t that way now.”
The union provides specialized training, beyond what is required by provincial
standards, for its own members in tile and brick. Other services such as bursaries
are available to union members.
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| Member Robert Scodeller affixes
shower tile. |
Training and organizing, said Higginson, go hand in hand. “When
the non-union folks come into the centre, they see the
kind of leadership we provide in the industry.”
Higginson said he often approaches non-union workers to
discuss the benefits of union membership. At other times,
it’s the company that signs on with the union. “Sometimes
organizing is bottom-up, other times it’s top-down,” says
Higginson. “A blend of the two methods is best.”
Higginson said he has to deal with a lot of fear and misconceptions
about unions. “The main thing is to let them do the
talking. The key fear is that unionization might make their
lives more difficult. They face a lot of pressure and coercive
tactics [from employers].”
“I tell them that a contractor offering $25 an hour
is not a good deal—not when there is no EI [Employment
Insurance premiums paid] and CPP [Canada Pension Plan premiums]
will cost you the whole shot. There are no Workers Compensation
payments [by the employer]. I point out [to them] that
they’re not subcontractors, as they’ve been
told, but employees. They’ve been helping to drive
the wage down. Now that there’s a great demand for
skilled workers, it’s time to level the playing field.”
Tuzzi acknowledged that some non-signatory contractors
do provide minimal health and welfare benefits and RRSP
contributions. But a comparison with the benefits of building
trades contract, they fall far short, he said.
Higginson said, “This is the part I love, talking
to people. I can give them information on Employment Standards
and whether they’re being treated fairly at the work
site. The best part of this job is the education.”
Tuzzi says BAC Local 2 has been approaching city councils about establishing
fair wage construction programs, selling the merits of a “level playing
field” between union and non-union contractors bidding for civic projects. “They
can reap the benefits that skilled labour supplies.”
“We’re incredibly optimistic about where we’re
going,” he added, citing a “huge support from
the membership. We’ve been around for 100 years and
we’ll be around for another 100.”
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