CBC Edition

Over 50 SNOLAB employees in Sudbury on strike after turning down latest offer

- Kate Rutherford

Picket lines are up outside a world-renowned physics research lab located deep inside a Sudbury, Ont., mine as 52 workers at SNO‐ LAB voted against a tenta‐ tive contract Tuesday night.

United Steelworke­rs Local 2020-59 represents dozens of workers, from janitorial staff to physicists, at the dark matter research facility with links to Nobel Prize-winning work in years past.

Pascal Boucher, north‐ eastern Ontario co-ordinator for the United Steelworke­rs, said the workers turned down a tentative agreement two weeks ago, then worked with a conciliato­r but voted against the deal that came out of those talks.

He didn't give specific de‐ tails about demands, but said wages and family time are high priorities.

"It's not a get-rich scheme for them," said Boucher. "It's about being respected and being able to live while mak‐ ing SNOLAB a world-class re‐ search facility."

Boucher said workers have been told SNOLAB is "tapped out" financiall­y, but he's not sure they believe that, given $2 million in pub‐ lic funding was received last October, in addition to an ini‐ tial $12 million in funding from the Ontario Ministry of Colleges and Universiti­es.

Boucher said everything is peaceful on the picket line as several hundred Vale miners represente­d by USW Local 6500 cross to go to work in Creighton Mine.

"People who work at Vale are lawfully required to re‐ port to work and we're not stopping traffic here," said Boucher.

"If people want to stop in and ask why our members are on strike, people will an‐ swer them."

Jodi Cooley, a physicist and executive director of SNOLAB, said the research facility is continuing to oper‐ ate as usual, with about 75 non-unionized staff.

Cooley said the lab does rely a great deal on the tech‐ nical expertise of its union‐ ized workforce.

For example, she said, electricia­ns or mill rights might be there to help with assembling equipment or hooking up utillities to con‐ duct research in the lab, and the specialize­d cleaning staff are responsibl­e for maintain‐ ing the high degree of cleanli‐ ness necessary to conduct such precise work.

Non-unionized staff are covering those jobs, she said, so experiment­s may proceed.

"I mean it would be a lie to say that it's not challeng‐ ing, but I have to give credit to our non-union staff," she said. "We do have people who are undergroun­d today and on the surface who are working undergroun­d to help maintain standard."

SNOLAB hopes to return to bargaining table

A statement provided by SNOLAB said wages for unionized employees range from $43,440 to $81,000, and as a result of the 2021 con‐ tract negotiatio­ns, the aver‐ age three-year increase across all unionized employ‐ ees was 11.9 per cent.

SNOLAB offers space to visiting scientists to conduct their research, and Cooley said recruiting new projects may be harder during a labour disruption.

"Being in this strike posi‐ tion is not ideal but we are going to maintain trying to keep our status as a leading laboratory in the world for the type of science that we do," she said. "We continue to be hopeful that we will be able to get back to the bar‐ gaining table and in the meantime, we are going to continue to try to attract those experiment­s to the lab and keep those experiment­s operating."

Past SNOLAB research on neutrino oscillatio­ns earned Arthur McDonald the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2015.

Current SNOLAB experi‐ ments include research into dark matter, supernovas and studies on the effects of working deep undergroun­d, using fruit flies as a model organism. that cleanlines­s

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