Ottawa Citizen

Art Gallery of Ontario workers go on strike after rejecting contract

Management hopes for a deal ‘soon’, but OPSEU says offer fell short on key issues

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More than 400 Art Gallery of Ontario employees are on strike, after union members voted to reject the museum’s latest contract offer.

The Ontario Public Service Employees Union said in a statement that the offer failed to address key issues such as wage increases, protection­s for part-time workers and contractin­g out positions.

The AGO’S website said the institutio­n was closed Tuesday due to the labour disruption and that management remained hopeful it would reach a negotiated agreement with OPSEU “soon.”

Striking employees are members of OPSEU Local 535 and they include assistant curators, archivists, food and hospitalit­y staff, researcher­s, instructor­s, carpenters, electricia­ns and visitor services staff, among others.

The union accused the AGO of “shortchang­ing long-term, loyal staff with an offer that does not reflect contempora­ry wages” after 10 months of bargaining.

“We need a deal that helps us stay afloat in a cost-of-living crisis in the most expensive city in Canada — and the AGO’S latest offer falls short of that,” OPSEU local president Paul Ayers said in Tuesday’s release.

The union has previously said that part-time employees make up more than 60 per cent of the AGO’S workforce, and they earn an average of $34,380 per year.

“Meanwhile, most top executives make north of $200,000 annually,” OPSEU said in a statement issued earlier in March.

Ayers said on Tuesday that public service employees “were hit right in the paycheque” during the COVID -19 pandemic and three years of wage restraint imposed by the now-repealed Bill 124, which had capped salary increases for broader public sector workers at one per cent a year.

“Being a ‘world-class’ institutio­n, as the AGO claims to be, starts with being a decent employer,” Ayers said.

“Last time we checked, part-time workers still pay full-time rent. We need a deal that makes it possible to earn a living and secure your future while working at the AGO.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Toronto’s
Art Gallery of Ontario closed on Tuesday after more than 400 employees went on strike.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Toronto’s Art Gallery of Ontario closed on Tuesday after more than 400 employees went on strike.

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