Calgary Herald

Building trades take pay cut for upkeep and shutdowns

- JOHN COTTER

Hard economic times have prompted an organizati­on that bargains for Alberta’s unionized building trades to sign a deal that includes lower pay for some workers in the hope of keeping them on the job.

The agreement, to start Jan. 1, covers employees who do daily upkeep and prepare for shutdowns and overhauls at oilsands, energy, petrochemi­cal and other industrial plants

Brett McKenzie, executive director of the General Presidents’ Maintenanc­e Committee, said union members are to be paid 75 cents an hour less than if they were doing constructi­on work. There are also some changes to overtime and benefits.

The three-year deal aims to help contractor­s, who employ union members, to win maintenanc­e contracts as industrial constructi­on activity in Alberta winds down.

“These concession­s are necessary to keep us in the game, to keep us on the inside of the fence,” said McKenzie.

“If our contractor­s are not in a position to win contracts, we are not going to be in a position to provide jobs and opportunit­ies for the members of the local unions in Alberta.”

The agreement covers carpenters, electricia­ns, ironworker­s, labourers, millwright­s, operating engineers, pipefitter­s, sheet-metal workers and other trades.

There is no ratificati­on vote. In recent years, maintenanc­e work has amounted to the equivalent of about 10,000 full-time jobs, McKenzie said.

He lays out the need for change in open letters to union members about how low oil prices and the downturn in the energy sector have already cost tens of thousands of Albertans their jobs.

Union members are being told there will be fierce competitio­n from non-union firms and the Christian Labour Associatio­n of Canada over the next few years for maintenanc­e work.If the building trades cannot meet new market demands, someone else will.

“Alberta has gone from a province that once had seven multibilli­ondollar constructi­on projects going on all at once to a province that only has two,” McKenzie said in an interview.

Building Trades of Alberta represents unions with members who work in the constructi­on, maintenanc­e and fabricatio­n industries.

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