Ratification Vote Meetings Scheduled

Ratification vote meetings have been scheduled for Local 793 members working under the Greater Toronto Sewer & Watermain Collective Agreement and the Toronto & Area Road Builders Collective Agreement. Click here for details on the ratification vote meeting for the Greater Toronto Sewer & Watermain Collective Agreement. Click here for details on the ratification vote meeting for the Toronto & Area Road Builders Collective Agreement.

Ratification vote meetings have been scheduled for Local 793 members working under the Greater Toronto Sewer & Watermain Collective Agreement and the Toronto & Area Road Builders Collective Agreement.

Click here for details on the ratification vote meeting for the Greater Toronto Sewer & Watermain Collective Agreement.

Click here for details on the ratification vote meeting for the Toronto & Area Road Builders Collective Agreement.

Local 793 Marks Day of Mourning

The time has come for employers and governments to join forces with unions and take concrete action to prevent any more workplace fatalities in Ontario. That was the overriding theme of remarks made by Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher at a morning ceremony at the union’s head office on April 28 to mark Canada’s National Day of Mourning. “When you know what should be done and it’s not done it’s extremely frustrating,” he told the audience gathered outside at a monument and memorial garden on the union property. “Unless […]

The time has come for employers and governments to join forces with unions and take concrete action to prevent any more workplace fatalities in Ontario.

That was the overriding theme of remarks made by Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher at a morning ceremony at the union’s head office on April 28 to mark Canada’s National Day of Mourning.

“When you know what should be done and it’s not done it’s extremely frustrating,” he told the audience gathered outside at a monument and memorial garden on the union property.

“Unless you take action and unless you have fines in place that are commiserate with the loss of life to families, and unless the owners that are involved that deliberately overlook safety hazards in the workplace are put in jail, then we’re going to continue to see this type of thing going on.”

Gallagher said the province talks about having a target of zero workplace deaths, which are fine-sounding words, but workplace deaths will continue to mount unless real action is taken.

“We’re going to be standing up here next year and the year after that and the year after that constantly talking about the fact that we have a zero target for deaths in the workplace.”

He said much more needs to be done than hanging flags at half-mast.

“If you kill a worker in the workplace due to negligence you should go to jail. The people that are involved in that negligence, that deliberately cut costs and overlook putting properly trained people or taking measures to keep people from unsafe situations or put pressure on workers to do work that is not safe should be punished with severe fines and also they should go to prison.”

Gallagher noted there were 16 construction deaths in Ontario in 2015 and already this year one worker was killed in Ottawa when ice from an excavation wall fell on him.

Workers had complained several times about ice buildup on the worksite, he said, yet the accident still happened.

“In my way of thinking there’s not a lot of work involved to take that ice away before subjecting workers to go down into an excavation and go to work with a large amount of ice hanging over top of them.”

Gallagher said no parent should be sending a son or daughter off to work, as if they were sending them off to war, and be forced to worry every minute if they will return at the end of the day.

“The time for action is now and we have to tell the powers that be, the politicians, the people that are in management, and the owners of companies, that they have to invest in their people and they have to protect their people.”

Gallagher called upon Premier Kathleen Wynne and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to enact and enforce laws to ensure that the people who are responsible for killing workers in the workplace pay the price behind bars.

“It’s not until we do that that we will actually have a safe workplace and can feel good about sending our children and our loved ones out to work, knowing that they will return at the end of the day.”

Gallagher said there is no reason in this day and age to have any workplace deaths.

He noted that Marc Normand, a 50-year-old Local 793 welder who was killed Nov. 2, 2015 when a pipe rolled off a loader and crushed him, died because an inexperienced worker who didn’t receive any training ended up operating a machine far superior to his skills without a journeyperson guiding him.

“I call upon all of our employers out there to join with us and support us in making sure that every worker that goes out there has the most qualifications that they can possibly have.”

Gallagher said the union has invested more than $100 million in training and wants to get compulsory certification for more heavy equipment trades to ensure that everybody operating machines is qualified.

He said the Operating Engineers will never stop trying to make worksites safer.

“We will work relentlessly to hold the feet to the fire of the powers that be to make sure we do not have to add any more names to this monument that’s here behind me. Let’s make the names that we added the last names that we added.”

Gallagher expressed his support for Bill 180 which has passed second reading in the Legislature and been referred to a standing committee. The Bill would raise awareness of workplace safety by seeing Canadian and Ontario flags at all government and public sector buildings across the province lowered to half-mast on April 28 each year.

“I truly feel that all of the elementary schools and the high schools, and the universities and the colleges and the trade schools, all of them should have their flags at half-mast, and more than that they should have a moment of silence and remember the workers who’ve died. We will be lobbying the government to make sure that recognition takes place for workers who have died on the job, just as it does for veterans on Remembrance Day.”

Gallagher noted it was fitting to hold the ceremony at the monument at head office as it was built to honour Local 793 members who’ve died as a result of a construction site accident or occupational illnesses.

Three names were added to the monument this year. They include:

  • John Hunt who died Sept. 2, 1980 at the age of 36. He was killed when he went into a building to get out of bad weather and the block structure collapsed.
  • Jamie Drew Davis who died July 12, 2015 at the age of 43. He died from complications from back surgery from an injury he suffered on the job.
  • Marc Normand who died Nov. 2, 2015 at the age of 50. He was killed at a road construction project in Unionville when a pipe rolled off a loader and crushed him.

 

[vsw id=”4Frux9e42eM” source=”youtube” width=”720″ height=”405″ autoplay=”no”]

Video presentation of the Day of Mourning ceremony held at IUOE Local 793 head office

Local 793 President Joe Redshaw delivers remarks at the event.

Local 793 Business Manager Mike Gallagher addresses attendees. OETIO staff and students attend the memorial event. Business Manager Mike Gallagher joined families at the Local 793 memorial in Oakville.

OETIO Receives Funds for New Equipment

Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher was quoted in the following article that appeared recently in Daily Commercial News. With an aging workforce and infrastructure spending ramping up, the need to teach specialty skills such as crane and heavy equipment operation in Ontario has gone past talk and into crunch time. Mike Gallagher, Oakville, Ont. business manager of Local 793 of the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE), addressed the gravity of the situation recently as he welcomed funding for seven new pieces of heavy equipment worth close to $1.3 […]

Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher was quoted in the following article that appeared recently in Daily Commercial News.

With an aging workforce and infrastructure spending ramping up, the need to teach specialty skills such as crane and heavy equipment operation in Ontario has gone past talk and into crunch time.

Mike Gallagher, Oakville, Ont. business manager of Local 793 of the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE), addressed the gravity of the situation recently as he welcomed funding for seven new pieces of heavy equipment worth close to $1.3 million for the Operating Engineers Training Institute of Ontario (OETIO) campuses in Morrisburg and Oakville.

The OETIO trains crane operators as well as heavy equipment operators who run dozers, backhoes and excavators but Gallagher said they are barely keeping up with demand.

There are currently 320 crane and tower apprentices training at the Oakville centre but research shows OETIO and the colleges who also train heavy equipment operators are in a race against time as the huge boomer generation reaches retirement age.

The average age of a journeyman mobile crane operator according to Ontario statistics compiled in 2012 was 50; even more pressing, the average tower crane operator was 58.

“We carefully monitor that,” said Gallagher. “We allow retirees to work for a certain amount of time after they retire but you can only keep working for so long at this trade, it is a physically demanding trade.”

“So the opportunity is there for young people considering a career.”

Click here to read full article

2016 Election Campaign Literature Rules

The union’s election committee has released rules about distribution of campaign literature during the 2016 union election. Click here to read the rules and a memo from Vince Prout, recording secretary of the election committee.

The union’s election committee has released rules about distribution of campaign literature during the 2016 union election.

Click here to read the rules and a memo from Vince Prout, recording secretary of the election committee.

Business Manager Tours NY Skyscraper Under Construction

Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher and business rep Jeff Hewitt toured a residential skyscraper under construction at 220 Central Park South in New York City on April 5. The building, located in midtown Manhattan, is one of the tallest presently under construction in New York. It was designed by American architect Robert A.M. Stern. There are two tower cranes on site. The building will have 65 floors and include 150 units. It is now 27 floors high. It will be 1,000 feet when completed. The building is being developed […]

Local 793 business manager Mike Gallagher and business rep Jeff Hewitt toured a residential skyscraper under construction at 220 Central Park South in New York City on April 5.

The building, located in midtown Manhattan, is one of the tallest presently under construction in New York.

It was designed by American architect Robert A.M. Stern.

There are two tower cranes on site. The building will have 65 floors and include 150 units. It is now 27 floors high.

It will be 1,000 feet when completed.

The building is being developed by Vornado. Completion is expected in 2016-17.

When completed, the tower will be the tenth tallest building in New York City, slightly shorter than Four World Trade Center.

Gallagher and Hewitt toured the site with IUOE Local 14 operators working for Pumpcrete. The Local 14 members from New York are operating tower concrete pumps for the building.

A trailer pump being used at the base of the residential tower was previously used on the Freedom Tower, the main building of the rebuilt World Trade Center complex in Lower Manhattan, New York City.

The Local 14 operators included Mark Ferwerda, Mark Olcott and Ron Kirk.

Gallagher was in New York to attend a general executive board meeting of the IUOE. Hewitt was there to attend a session on business rep training.

Local 793's Mike Gallagher and Jeff Hewitt with Local 14 members in New York. Mike Gallagher with members of Local 14 at the site in midtown Manhattan. Mike Gallagher and members of Local 14 in Manhattan. Mike Gallagher is greeted by a member of Local 14.

Local 793 is Doing Well: Gallagher

Local 793 is thriving but the officers will not rest on the laurels, business manager Mike Gallagher said at a special executive board meeting at head office in Oakville on April 2, 2016. “The union is in great financial shape and our membership numbers are growing,” he said, noting that the number of hours worked by members has also been increasing each year. The union is getting stronger, he said, with membership now around 14,200, Gallagher said. Total hours worked in 2015 totaled 19,918,517, 6.62 per cent higher than the […]

Local 793 is thriving but the officers will not rest on the laurels, business manager Mike Gallagher said at a special executive board meeting at head office in Oakville on April 2, 2016.

“The union is in great financial shape and our membership numbers are growing,” he said, noting that the number of hours worked by members has also been increasing each year.

The union is getting stronger, he said, with membership now around 14,200, Gallagher said.

Total hours worked in 2015 totaled 19,918,517, 6.62 per cent higher than the previous year, he said, while consolidated members’ equity at the end of 2015 was $85,987,666, 12.6 per cent higher than the previous year.

Consolidated assets of the union, meanwhile, were $93,982,580 at the end of 2015, 14.6 per cent higher than the previous year, he said.

Gallagher said the pension fund is also healthy and trustees have done a very good job in challenging times. The fund earned 5.9 per cent in 2015 while the S&P/TSXComposite Index fell by 8.3 per cent.

He said the actuary has informed trustees that consent for unreduced pension at age 60 can be extended for another year to 2017.

The benefits plan is also doing well, Gallagher noted, collecting $68.8 million in 2015 and paying out $58.5 million in claims and expenses.

Trustees of the plan have decided to increase the dental coverage to $3,000 from $2,500, he said.

On the training front, Gallagher said the OETIO is successfully completing an $11-million expansion at the campus in Morrisburg and a 70-room dormitory should be ready by June.

“We have done all that without having to go to the bank and ask for money, which shows just how strong we are,” he said.

While Local 793 is in good shape, Gallagher said the officers are looking to the future and plan to continue growing the union by hiring more organizers.

“We have to keep on building. We have to keep on growing. If you look at our Constitution that’s what we have to keep on doing, going out and building our market share.”

Gallagher said he sees no reason why Local 793 can’t become as big as the IUOE local in California.

He pointed out that Local 793 has the most organizers on board ever and they are working to bring in more members.

When people go home at night to watch a hockey game, the organizers are often still out there doing their job, he said.

“There’s a lot of miles being put in by our organizers and our business reps.”

Gallagher told the meeting that he wants to keep bringing the benefits of unionization to the non-union sector.

“I’m not going to be satisfied until every worker out there has the advantage of belonging to this great organization.”

In addition to growing the numbers, Gallagher said he also wants to expand the union facilities.

Soon, he said, the union may build a 30-to-40-room dorm at the OETIO campus in Oakville and add more offices for training.

The union may also expand its banquet hall, he said, so it can accommodate 350 to 400 more people and allow it to be used for larger functions.

At the beginning of his remarks, Gallagher observed that Republican Donald Trump is attracting a lot of attention in the U.S. with his comments about building a wall on the country’s southern border and having Mexico pay for it.

Gallagher jokingly said he was thinking about building a wall around Local 793 and having CLAC pay for it.

Also at the meeting:

  • Gallagher announced that Ken Boyle, a 50-year member from Sarnia who served on the union’s executive board until his retirement in 2002, has been made an honourary lifetime member along with George Bennett, a 50-year member from Kerwood who served on the union’s election committee and presently is on the union’s insurance committee and Jack Redshaw Scholarship Committee.
  • Gallagher congratulated former Toronto area supervisor John Monti and London business rep Curtis Hynds on their retirements. Monti, a 40-year member, was on staff for 27 years and was union auditor. He was also a trustee on the Training Trust Fund and was a director and then president of the Local 793 Non-Profit Housing Corporation. Hynds, a 32-year member, was on staff for 17 years.

General Membership Meeting on April 3

Local 793’s general membership meeting is scheduled for Sunday, April 3, 2016 in the union banquet hall, 2245 Speers Rd., Oakville. Meeting time is 10 a.m. Click here for map.

Local 793’s general membership meeting is scheduled for Sunday, April 3, 2016 in the union banquet hall, 2245 Speers Rd., Oakville.

Meeting time is 10 a.m.

Click here for map.

General Membership Meeting on April 3

Local 793’s general membership meeting is scheduled for Sunday, April 3, 2016 in the union banquet hall, 2245 Speers Rd., Oakville. Meeting time is 10 a.m. Click here for map.

Local 793’s general membership meeting is scheduled for Sunday, April 3, 2016 in the union banquet hall, 2245 Speers Rd., Oakville.

Meeting time is 10 a.m.

Click here for map.

Proposal Meeting for Ontario Formwork Agreement

A meeting is being held Sunday, March 20 to take proposals for the Ontario Formwork Collective Agreement Meeting time is 11 a.m. The meeting is being held in the OE Banquet Hall, 2245 Speers Road, Oakville.

A meeting is being held Sunday, March 20 to take proposals for the Ontario Formwork Collective Agreement

Meeting time is 11 a.m.

The meeting is being held in the OE Banquet Hall, 2245 Speers Road, Oakville.

Local 793 Participates in St. Patrick’s Parade

Local 793 operators, staff and family members participated in the Toronto St. Patrick’s Day Parade on March 13, 2016. Business manager Mike Gallagher led the Local 793 group. Union members wore bright green jackets and baseball hats. The union was a sponsor of the parade. The importance of labour was a major theme of this year’s parade. The parade began at noon. The procession started at Bloor and St. George and wound its way along Bloor, down Yonge Street and onto Queen Street before finishing at University Avenue.  

Local 793 operators, staff and family members participated in the Toronto St. Patrick’s Day Parade on March 13, 2016.

Business manager Mike Gallagher led the Local 793 group. Union members wore bright green jackets and baseball hats.

The union was a sponsor of the parade. The importance of labour was a major theme of this year’s parade.

The parade began at noon. The procession started at Bloor and St. George and wound its way along Bloor, down Yonge Street and onto Queen Street before finishing at University Avenue.Local 793 members prepare to march in the St Patrick's Day Parade in Toronto.Local 793 members show off their bright green jackets.Business Manager Mike Gallagher leads the Local 793 contingent.Irish tricolours are flown proudly.A thumbs up from Mike Gallagher during the parade.Everyone got into the spirit at the march.Member and their families enjoy the day.Members march together.Local 793 members and their families march on the streets of downtown Toronto.Children joined parents for the march.Tricolour trucks were all part of the fun.