logo
/R E P E A T -- OPSEU/SEFPO and CUPE Ontario workers picket Conservative MPP offices demanding a 'piece of the pie' in Ontario's budget/

/R E P E A T -- OPSEU/SEFPO and CUPE Ontario workers picket Conservative MPP offices demanding a 'piece of the pie' in Ontario's budget/

Cision Canada22-05-2025

TORONTO, May 21, 2025 /CNW/ - As Members of Provincial Parliament return home for constituency week, Conservative MPPs are being met by daily protests and pickets. Frustrated by years of underfunding that was exacerbated by Doug Ford's wage supressing Bill 124, a coalition of OPSEU/SEFPO and CUPE workers are demanding a piece of the provincial pie in the form of more funding to provide a critical lifeline for the frontline community services they provide and justice for stolen wages.
Together, OPSEU/SEFPO and CUPE represent over 50,000 workers who serve their communities every day as developmental service workers, child protection workers, mental health and addictions workers, and in myriad other critical roles. While they have watched workers across other public sectors receive backpay from the provincial government since Bill 124 was struck down, they have been ignored and their services have been slashed.
Since Ford was first elected in 2018, per capita spending for children, community and social services and postsecondary education has shrunk each year. The Financial Accountability Office estimates that the Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services programs were underfunded by $3.7 billion in 2024. This underfunding has devastating real world impacts, translating to more than 50,000 adults waiting for developmental services, more than 70,000 children with autism waiting for core therapy, and hundreds of children in the care of child protection agencies left sleeping in motels, hotels, and offices for want of proper facilities. It also means that community support workers remain among the lowest paid workers in the public service as rates of burnout skyrocket.
Highly organized and motivated, workers are now demanding redress directly from the funder of the agencies they work at – the provincial government. That is the message being delivered at pickets across Ontario this week and at the bargaining table as more than 70 OPSEU/SEFO and CUPE locals are negotiating new collective agreements with identical demands.
OPSEU/SEFPO President JP Hornick and CUPE Ontario President Fred Hahn will be on-site at the picket outside Minister of Community, Children and Social Services Michael Parsa's constituency office on May 23 from 12 pm – 1 pm. Media spokespersons will be available at all picket locations.
Pickets will take place at the following locations:
Wednesday, May 21
BELLEVILLE
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Tyler Allsopp's office – Unit 8, 5503 Hwy 62 S., Belleville
BRACEBRIDGE
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Graydon Smith's office – 230 Manitoba St., Bracebridge
LINDSAY
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Laurie Scott's office – 14 Lindsay St. N, Lindsay
NORTH BAY
Date: May 20-23, 2025 (daily)
Time: 9am - 2pm (CUPE 2073 picket line)
Location: MPP Victor Fedeli's office – 219 Main Street East, North Bay
OWEN SOUND
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 5pm – 6pm
Location: MPP Paul Vicker's office – 345 8 th St. E., Owen Sound
PETERBOROUGH
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Dave Smith's office – Unit E, 864 Chemong Rd., Peterborough
ST. THOMAS
Date: May 21, 2025
Time: 3:30pm – 4:30pm
Location: MPP Rob Flack's office – Suite 201, 750 Talbot St., St. Thomas
Thursday, May 22
NORTH BAY
Date: May 20-23, 2025 (daily)
Time: 9am - 2pm (CUPE 2073 picket line)
Location: MPP Victor Fedeli's office – 219 Main Street East, North Bay
OAKVILLE
Date: May 22, 2025
Time: 3pm-5pm
Location: MPP Stephen Crawford's office – 53 Bond St., Oakville
Friday, May 23
FERGUS
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Joseph Racinsky's office – 181 St. Andrew St. E, Fergus
HAMILTON
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Donna Skelly's office – 2000 Garth St., Hamilton
KENORA
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 11am – 2pm
Location: MPP Greg Rickford's office – 610 Lakeview Dr Suite B., Kenora
KINGSTON
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 9am - 2pm (CUPE 2073 picket line)
Location: Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services – 11 Beechgrove Ln, Kingston
NORTH BAY
Date: May 20-23, 2025 (daily)
Time: 9am - 2pm (CUPE 2073 picket line)
Location: MPP Victor Fedeli's office – 219 Main Street East, North Bay
OTTAWA
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12 – 1:15 pm
Location: MPP Lucille Collard's office, 237 Montreal Rd., Ottawa
RICHMOND HILL
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Michael Parsa's office – Suite 201, 13085 Yonge St., Richmond Hill
SARNIA
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12pm – 1pm
Location: MPP Robert Bailey's office – Suite 102, 805 Christina St. N., Point Edward
TORONTO (North)
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 4pm – 5pm
Location: MPP Michelle Cooper's office – 2882 Dufferin St., Toronto
THUNDER BAY
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 11:30am – 1pm
Location: MPP Kevin Holland's office – 774 James St. N, Thunder Bay
WALLACEBURG
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 10am-11am & 4pm-5pm
Location: MPP Steve Pinsonneault's office – 81 Front St. W., Strathroy
WOODSTOCK
Date: May 23, 2025
Time: 12:30 – 1:30 pm
Location: MPP Ernie Hardeman's office, 12 Perry St., Woodstock
SOURCE Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ford government used code words to make it 'unduly difficult' to search Greenbelt records: report
Ford government used code words to make it 'unduly difficult' to search Greenbelt records: report

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Ford government used code words to make it 'unduly difficult' to search Greenbelt records: report

Social Sharing Ontario Premier Doug Ford's government broke its legal, record-keeping obligations amid its now-reversed decision to open up parts of the protected Greenbelt lands for housing, the province's information and privacy commissioner has found. Political staff were using code words to thwart document requests and left a surprisingly small paper trail for such a consequential policy, Commissioner Patricia Kosseim wrote as part of her annual report. A number of freedom-of-information appeals her office received on Greenbelt-related requests revealed concerning, systemic issues, she wrote. "The Greenbelt-related appeals offer a clear example and cautionary tale about the consequences of inadequate recordkeeping," the IPC report said. "When key government decisions are not properly documented, when code words are used, or when records are stored in fragmented ways across personal and official systems, transparency suffers, and with it, public trust." In addition to issues previously highlighted by the auditor general around political staff deleting Greenbelt emails and using personal accounts, the government sometimes used code words in communications. Staffers sometimes referred to the Greenbelt project in messages as "special project," or "GB," or "G..," with references to G.. being next to impossible to find. Those terms and their inconsistent use made it "unduly difficult" to search for Greenbelt-related records, Kosseim wrote. "Worse, the use of the code word "G.." made it virtually impossible to find relevant records, given that the asterisk ("..") is used as a technical wildcard when conducting text searches, returning any word starting with "G," she wrote. That meant having to forego using the code word "G.." as a search term, so some Greenbelt records may have been missed, Kosseim wrote. "These practices not only violate legal record-keeping obligations, they also erode public trust in the integrity of government decision-making," she wrote. "The public has a fundamental right to know how and why decisions are made, especially those that impact protected lands like the Greenbelt. When records are obfuscated and made difficult, if not impossible, to find through evasive code words, transparency is compromised, and oversight becomes illusory." But there was also a "surprising" lack of Greenbelt documentation at all, which undermines transparency, Kosseim found. "The near-total absence of decision-making documentation is particularly concerning, especially on a file as high profile and consequential as changes to the Greenbelt," the report said. "Despite evidence of meetings and discussions involving premier's office staff and ministry staff about the Greenbelt, there was very little documentation of what was said or decided in those conversations, aside from a few contemporaneous notes taken by ministry staff." The RCMP is in the midst of an investigation into the government's decision to remove 15 parcels of land from the Greenbelt to remove 50,000 homes — a process the auditor general and integrity commissioner have found favoured certain developers. Premier Doug Ford's office says the government has taken several steps to strengthen record-keeping practices, including reminding staff to preserve and manage records in accordance with requirements and holding training sessions, and will continue to comply with legal obligations. NDP Leader Marit Stiles said "enough is enough," because the last time political staff were found to be deleting government records, one went to jail. A top aide to former premier Dalton McGuinty was convicted of illegal use of a computer relating to his destruction of potentially embarrassing documents about the Liberal government's costly decision to cancel two gas plants before the 2011 provincial election. Stiles said there should be consequences for these new failings. "When will the premier finally answer for the disturbing culture of dodging accountability and disappearing records within this government?" she wrote in a statement.

Guelph, Ont. council formally condemns resolution letter on Bills 5 and 17
Guelph, Ont. council formally condemns resolution letter on Bills 5 and 17

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Guelph, Ont. council formally condemns resolution letter on Bills 5 and 17

A Guelph, Ont., city councillor's criticism of the Ford government's controversial Bill 5 will be heard at Queen's Park. On Tuesday, city staff unanimously approved Ward 5 Coun. Leanne Caron's resolution of bills 5 and 17. The letter formally condemns the Bills. However, Caron said she's not confident it'll land in the hands of Ontario Premier Doug Ford. 'Bill 23 and Bill 124 did not get more housing built and those were bills in the last term of this government that were promised more housing. So, I just don't believe that this government is listening, and this letter will fall on deaf ears,' Caron said. Bill 5 received royal assent on June 5, and it includes legislation that gives the Ontario government the power to designate some areas as special economic zones to speed up economic development projects. Story continues below advertisement Bill 17, Protect Ontario by Building Faster and Smarter Act, was passed in May and focuses on the province's goal of building more homes, infrastructure and businesses. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Caron said the bill doesn't build economic growth, as it overlooks provincial laws and ignores environmental protections. Critics argue Bill 5 takes away rights from Indigenous groups. Caron said the federal government has a role to play, including Dominique O'Rourke, a former councillor and current MP for Guelph. 'As a former city councillor, she (O'Rourke) was a champion for some of these protections and local land-use planning regulations that we've put in place to build great cities,' Caron said. Global News attempted to contact O'Rourke, but she was unavailable to provide comment by the time of publication. Mike Schreiner, MPP for Guelph and leader of the Green Party of Ontario, said he's happy to see council pass the resolution against the bill. He refers to Bill 5 as a 'power grab' by Ford. 'He's essentially given himself and his hand-picked cabinet ministers the power to select hand-picked companies or projects who can operate in special economic zones and have laws applied or not applied to them,' Schreiner said. Caron also believes Schreiner's voice is being heard in Ottawa. Story continues below advertisement Schreiner said multiple groups of people are expressing their concerns over the bill, including Indigenous organizations, environmental and labour groups, and farmers, and he said it's going to take that kind of citizen mobilization to put pressure on Ford to repeal Bill 5. 'People are mobilizing to oppose Bill 5 in the same way they mobilized to force the premier to backtrack on his plans to open the Greenbelt for development,' he said. Moving forward, Caron said the city will take a wait-and-see approach and continue to focus on issues surrounding affordability and housing. 'There's still a lot that this city needs to do to move forward on our city-building agenda and we're going to need the province to be partners on that,' she said.

Greenbelt investigation finds Ford government actions ‘compromised' transparency
Greenbelt investigation finds Ford government actions ‘compromised' transparency

Global News

time4 hours ago

  • Global News

Greenbelt investigation finds Ford government actions ‘compromised' transparency

Ontario's transparency watchdog says the Ford government's use of personal emails and codewords when it removed land from the Greenbelt provides a 'cautionary tale' on the importance of transparency, in a report lambasting it for poor record-keeping. On Thursday, the Information and Privacy Commissioner's office released a report summarizing the results of a number of freedom of information appeals over Greenbelt decisions and communications. Taken together, the appeals show the government violated 'legal record-keeping obligations,' the report said, adding that the incidents 'erode public trust in the integrity of government decision making.' The report found the government had used 'opaque codewords' to refer to discussions about the Greenbelt, something that 'weakens transparency.' It also expressed surprise at the lack of records showing who made the decision to remove 7,400 acres of protected land from the Greenbelt and what considerations went into it. Story continues below advertisement That land removal decision was announced in November 2022 and met with fierce backlash. It sparked investigations from the auditor general and integrity commissioner and led to resignations of ministers and senior staff, before it was eventually reversed less than a year later. Ontario Premier Doug Ford apologized when he walked back the decision, which the auditor general said would have benefited certain developers to the tune of more than $8 billion. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Almost two years later, the IPC said a lack of records and poorly managed transparency practices have left many questions unanswered. 'When records are lost, destroyed, obfuscated, or never created in the first place, it raises more questions than answers,' the information and privacy commissioner's report said. The report covered questions about deleted emails, setting out the steps taken to try and recover emails that had been destroyed. 'The adjudicator was satisfied with the measures taken despite the technical limitations of recovering any permanently deleted emails,' one line said. Ontario NDP Leader Marit Stiles said the potential deletion of emails required further investigation. 'Deleting government records is illegal. The last time this happened; someone went to jail,' she said in a statement. Story continues below advertisement 'When will the Premier finally answer for the disturbing culture of dodging accountability and disappearing records within this government?' The transparency watchdog also issued a number of orders telling staff to search their personal email accounts — and for the premier to search his personal cellphone — due to 'credible evidence' they had been used to make government decisions and avoid access to information requests. The report found the government had demonstrated a 'poor level of commitment' to managing its records properly. 'The IPC's findings in these appeals highlight the urgent need for stronger records management practices, regular staff training, clear policies prohibiting the use of personal email accounts and devices for conducting government business, and a clearly articulated, unwavering commitment to transparency and public accountability,' an extract said. 'Without a full and accurate record of decision-making, the public is left in the dark about government actions that affect their communities and the environment.' An investigation by the RCMP into the Greenbelt decision is still ongoing. Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said he hoped the findings in the report would 'inform' investigators working on the case, which has been underway since October 2023. 'I am also hoping that the IPC report helps inform the RCMP investigation because it just proves, by an independent officer of the legislation, the lengths to which the Ford government has gone to try and cover this up and hide this scandal from the public.' Story continues below advertisement The report added that the government had taken steps since the Greenbelt scandal that 'signal positive movement towards compliance,' stressing that 'oversight remains essential.' A spokesperson for the premier's office said they would work to ensure lessons were learned. 'We will continue to comply with our obligations under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Archives and Recordkeeping Act,' they wrote in a statement. 'As the Commissioner lays out in this report, the government has taken a number of positive steps to strengthen record-keeping practices.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store