The Hamilton Spectator

NDP launch pension protection fight

MP Scott Duvall will introduce private member’s bill this fall to defend pensions in bankruptcy cases

- MARK MCNEIL

The federal NDP kicked off a weekend caucus strategy session in Hamilton with a rally to argue for federal legislatio­n to protect pensioners in bankruptcy proceeding­s.

Hamilton Mountain MP Scott Duvall, the New Democrats’ pension critic, told a crowd at the United Steelworke­rs’ Hall on Barton Street East Friday that he will introduce a private member’s bill this fall to “protect workers’ pensions and benefits, and force companies to provide terminatio­n or severance pay, before paying secured creditors.”

The issue has been a long simmering one with labour unions and was a major area of contention during the nearly three-year, court-supervised restructur­ing of U.S. Steel Canada. The company emerged from creditor protection June 30 with a new owner — Bedrock Industries — and an old name, Stelco.

But pensioners were smarting. The court allowed the company to suspend health benefit payments for about a year and a half while the company was under creditor protection through the Companies’ Creditors and Arrangemen­t Act. (CCAA).

Those benefits, for the most part, have resumed with the newly restructur­ed company. But pensioners are worried that a funding scheme to keep the pension plan solvent will eventually falter. Among other things, it calls for unused Stelco land to be cleaned up and sold to be used as a revenue source to cover pension obligation­s in the future.

Duvall, along with departing NDP leader Tom Mulcair, said another example of how the legislatio­n is unfair to workers is with Sears Canada. The company is in creditor protection and its workers are facing a potential reduction in their pensions.

“This needs to be about fairness for workers. We will continue to fight for a Canada that works for everyone and will make sure corporatio­ns and multinatio­nals can’t steal the pensions their workers and retirees have earned,” said Duvall.

The NDP says the current legislatio­n allows money that should go to workers’ pensions to be given to secured creditors instead.

And in many cases, the secured creditor is the insolvent or creditor-protected firm’s parent company.

Stelco’s largest secured creditor was U.S. Steel in the United States. The $500 million restructur­ing deal saw the American company receive $130 million.

The Duvall bill would require pension plans to be 100 per cent funded before secured creditors

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