Sunday, March 20, 2022

 NFLD & LABRADOR

NAPE Holds Rally for Striking Choices for Youth Workers

NAPE Holds Rally for Striking Choices for Youth Workers

NAPE held a rally Thursday afternoon in support of members at Choices for Youth’s The Lilly, who have been on strike since Tuesday.

NAPE President Jerry Earle says workers simply want to be able to return to work under a fair deal. He’s optimistic that a solution can be reached if both sides agree to meet at the negotiation table.

He says this has been one of the toughest rounds of collective bargaining that he has seen, which is surprising considering the fact that Choices for Youth is a non-profit organization. Earle believes recent conversations are a step in the right direction, but there has to be a discussion.

NAPE: “The Gloves Are Off” as Talks With Choices for Youth Hit Snag

NAPE: "The Gloves Are Off" as Talks With Choices for Youth Hit Snag

Talks between NAPE and Choices for Youth have broken off.

The two sides have been trying to reach the first collective agreement for staff at The Lilly.

The nine unionized workers at The Lilly have been on strike since Tuesday.

NAPE President Jerry Earle says talks broke off Friday after a very short session at the table.

Earle says “the gloves are off,” promising to make sure that the limelight is pointed squarely on the organization, and its labour and spending practices.

Choices for Youth, workers return to bargaining table

Workers began strike action Tuesday

Unionized workers at the Lilly supportive housing centre, operated by Choices for Youth, stand on the picket line during a solidarity rally in downtown St. John's Thursday afternoon. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

Unionized workers at the Lilly supportive housing centre, operated by Choices for Youth, are back at the bargaining table Thursday morning in search of a new collective bargaining agreement.

In an email sent Thursday afternoon, communications manager Katie Keats said Choices for Youth met with the bargaining unit and a conciliator Wednesday, and received a proposal from the union later that day.  She said they're reviewing the proposal.

Nine of the Lilly's employees went on strike Tuesday after voting unanimously in favour of strike action. The group, represented by the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Public and Private Employees, is working to negotiate its first collective agreement since joining the union two years ago.

In a media release issued by Choices For Youth on Thursday, the group said they hope to end the strike as soon as possible.

"Our focus is on continuing discussions with NAPE until we reach an agreement, while ensuring continued care for young people supported by Choices for Youth," the release said.

Dozens of supporters stood outside the Choices for Youth centre in downtown St. John's on Thursday afternoon in a solidarity rally organized by NAPE. Union president Jerry Earle said they won't rest until a tentative agreement is signed.

"These workers do not want to be here. They don't want to be on the picket line, they would rather be with the youth that's asking for them day after day after day," Earle told spectators.

"It's very easy. Collective bargaining 101. You sit on the other side of the table, you have the tough conversations, you work out the issues, and you respect your workers."

Jessica Wall, right, hugs one of the striking employees of the Lilly following a speech at the rally. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

The crowd also heard from Jessica Wall, who lived in the Lilly for five years. She emphasized the importance of the staff in the lives of people who live in the centre.

"They're still the first people I call when I'm struggling, the first people I call when I'm doing well, and the first people I call when I have big news," Wall said.

"The Lilly is home to me and to many of my friends, and it will always be our home.… It's not the building that is home. It's not the paint on the walls, the ceilings, the floors, the doors, the windows, the furniture that makes the Lilly home for us. It's the staff. They are home to us. They are home to me. Without the current staff of the Lilly and the staff that have worked at the Lilly, there would be no home."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

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