Cape Breton Post

Out for justice

Small group of Nova Scotia restorativ­e justice caseworker­s strike for better pay

- BY KEITH DOUCETTE

A small band of caseworker­s in Nova Scotia’s ground-breaking restorativ­e justice system are on strike to win “wage fairness” as they struggle with caseloads they say have doubled since 2016.

The group, comprised of five women and one man from the Halifax-area office, hit the picket line Monday and staged a noon-hour rally to air their grievances.

They are employed by the provincial­ly funded Community Justice Society, and the only unionized group of caseworker­s in the system.

Denise Russell, president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees local, said the workload increase is directly attributab­le to Nova Scotia’s 2016 decision to expand its restorativ­e justice program to include adults — the first province in Canada to do so.

Russell said the caseworker­s’ salaries have also lagged behind provincial probation officers and the time has come to seek parity. She said there is as much as a $4,000 difference in the starting wage for probation officers and the caseworker­s.

“We’ve allowed it to happen year after year,” said Russell. “When the adult program came in we were like, this isn’t fair. We’re doing the same work with the same clientele and not getting a comparable wage.”

The restorativ­e justice program brings offenders, victims of crime, and communitie­s together to resolve issues without incarcerat­ion. It requires offenders to take responsibi­lity for their actions and holds them accountabl­e to the community and their victims.

The workers in the Halifax office say they handle more than 70 per cent of all cases in Nova Scotia.

Caseworker Shila LeBlanc said the Halifax workers handled 248 case files in 2016 and saw that figure jump to 617 in 2017 — a 149 per cent increase.

“The adult program was rolled out with no additional funding, no additional staff,” said LeBlanc, who pointed out that the employee turnover rate has also been high.

“We feel if we were compensate­d fairly the turnover rate would diminish. For now the main driver of this campaign is we need better wages.”

The caseworker­s were supported at Monday’s rally by union activists, including Nova Scotia Federation of Labour president Danny Cavanagh. NDP Leader Gary Burrill also turned up in support, along with his party’s justice critic, Claudia Chender.

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