Vancouver Sun

BUILDING TRADES HISTORY AN IMPORTANT REMINDER

Former B.C. labour leader chronicles battles for better wages, workplace safety

- TOM SANDBORN Tom Sandborn lives and writes in Vancouver. He is a retired member of the Amalgamate­d Transit Union and has supported the union movement since his first job for wages at a Teamster organized cannery in California in 1965. He welcomes your fee

We Build B.C.: History of the B.C. Building Trades

Jim Sinclair | B.C. Building Trades Council

$20, 218pp.

Most Canadians know more about the sex life of America’s current president than we do about the labour organizati­ons that fought so hard over centuries to win us a five-day week, minimum wage and employment standards legislatio­n, not to mention publicly funded health care and education. Jim Sinclair, former president of the B.C. Federation of Labour, sets out to dispel some of this induced amnesia in his new book, We Build B.C.: History of the B.C. Building Trades.

The Carpenters’ Society, formed in 1799 in Halifax, was one of the first unions organized in this country. In 1889, carpenters led B.C.’s first constructi­on strike in Vancouver.

Since then, workers in the building trades have been important players in the creation of the province’s infrastruc­ture and in the complex socio/political dynamics that pitted organized workers against employers in battles to determine how much of the wealth workers created with their tools and skills would remain in their own pockets.

When the B.C. and Yukon Territory Building Trades Council was formed in 1967, it united more than 20 unions and labour councils representi­ng over 50,000 workers. According to the Council’s website, the current numbers are 17 unions and 35,000 members. Clearly, the successful anti-union campaign led by big business and its tame think tanks like the Fraser Institute over the past decades has had its effect in constructi­on.

But the history of the building trades in B.C. is not just an account of a fighting retreat as management-friendly government­s changed labour law to make union organizing more difficult and safety regulation enforcemen­t less effective. It is also a story of strikes fought and won, wages improved and (some) workplace dangers reduced. Sinclair gives a useful and comprehens­ive account of many of those victories.

One particular­ly interestin­g story Sinclair tells is about a group of Latin American temporary foreign workers employed and savagely exploited in the constructi­on of the RAV line tunnel under False Creek. Building Trades Council Joe Barrett helped expose this abusive situation and the foreign workers were signed up as members of a council member union. Eventually, after years of struggle and support from the Council, the workers won a human rights complaint and were granted $2.4 million in compensati­on.

Much of the history recounted in this book has been lost to common memory. Sinclair has done us all a favour in bringing it back to light. Highly recommende­d.

 ?? RICHARD LAM/FILE ?? Jim Sinclair, former president of the B.C. Federation of Labour, delivers a comprehens­ive account of the history of building trades in the province.
RICHARD LAM/FILE Jim Sinclair, former president of the B.C. Federation of Labour, delivers a comprehens­ive account of the history of building trades in the province.
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