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OCS, Constructionlab collaborate on labour relations fundamentals course

Angela Gismondi
OCS, Constructionlab collaborate on labour relations fundamentals course

The next generation of labour and management stakeholders in the unionized construction sector will soon have access to a new labour relations course that aims to train them on the fundamentals of collective agreements in the ICI sector.

The Ontario Construction Secretariat (OCS) is partnering with Constructionlab to develop and deliver the course, coined Construction Labour Relations Fundamentals.

鈥淲e felt that there was a lot of knowledge that was potentially going to be lost through retirements, so we felt we needed a formal course,鈥 Robert Bronk, OCS CEO, told the Daily Commercial News.

鈥淲e wanted to have a bar for labour and management so everybody is operating on the same page; the same understanding of what collective agreements say and what they don鈥檛 say; processes for mediation and arbitration; types of negotiations, just to raise the general awareness of the industry.鈥

The process started two years ago but with COVID it was difficult to do in-person meetings, Bronk said.

鈥淲e saw that there was really nothing out there that was specific for the construction industry and even more specifically for the ICI sector,鈥 he noted.

Constructionlab Ltd. was awarded the contract to develop the course design following a request for proposals process.

The course is geared to anybody associated with employer or employee bargaining representatives and those in the bargaining room negotiating collective agreements. The goal is to deliver the first course this November.

The three-day, 21-hour course will likely be held in person with the possibility of a virtual component.

鈥淭he purpose of this really is to make sure that in off bargaining years that labour and management are coming together to collaborate and spend some time shaking hands and meeting and greeting everybody,鈥 said Derek Smith, the project lead for Constructionlab. 鈥淭hat has to be done in-person.鈥

The broad themes for the course were developed with the help of Reg Pearson, former OCS board member and former associate deputy minister for the Centre for Public Sector Labour Relations and Compensation.

鈥淲e worked with him to get the first iteration, the broad chapters and topics and to get the bones of what the course is going to look like and what are some of the major teaching objectives,鈥 Bronk explained.

鈥淟ast November, we had a pilot run. We invited 20 stakeholders and gave the first dry run. We got a lot of feedback from everybody.

鈥淲e put together that package and then we put out an RFP.鈥

The course will include eight themes: historical context of construction labour relations; what the current legislation framework is; understanding collective agreements; collective bargaining process and negotiations; grievances and jurisdictional disputes; occupational health and safety; human rights in a context of collective agreements; and labour and management collaborative partnerships.

While all aspects are important, Smith says historical perspective is key.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a lot of new people coming into labour relations. There is a generation that is leaving鈥nd there is a lot of new young management that are maybe from other backgrounds,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he other piece to it, which is really huge, is negotiating skills. You鈥檙e sitting in a room bargaining a collective agreement, somebody鈥檚 future, the next three years of their income and you may not have negotiating skills.鈥

Bronk expects there will be quite a bit of demand for the course. He also hopes it will give people a better understanding of grievances and jurisdictional disputes.

鈥淲hen people understand the process better there may be opportunities to go a less formal route than to go all the way to the labour board in terms of dispute resolution,鈥 said Bronk.

鈥淚f everybody understands the processes better we can come to dispute resolutions quicker and faster and that鈥檚 better for everybody.鈥

Over the next few months, Smith will be finalizing the course material. While he is the prime facilitator for the course, he is planning to have guest facilitators as well.

Smith is also designing the breakout group and interactive exercises to maximize engagement of participants and is also putting together a resource handbook.

鈥淥ne of the key aspects of the overall project is to ensure that as the course is being developed, it is being tested by those who are at the bargaining table and on the ground involved in local work area practices, grievance procedures and finding solutions to better Ontario鈥檚 existing industrial, commercial and institutional construction collective agreements,鈥 he said.鈥

鈥淲e have established an internal review team to do just that.鈥

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