TORONTO -
The Ontario legislature* met in a rare session Sunday and passed legislation forcing an end to a two-day strike by TTC workers that crippled commuting in Canada's largest city.
The legislation passed unanimously to order 9,000 striking transit employees to return to their jobs, meaning buses, subways and streetcars were expected to be rolling by mid-evening Sunday.
"We are acting in the best interest of all of Ontario," Premier Dalton McGuinty said in the legislature.
"It goes without saying that Toronto, our capital city, plays an important role. That is why we are bringing this legislation today."
All three provincial parties supported the back-to-work legislation, however only 65 of 107 provincial politicians were present for the emergency session.
"We encourage the TTC and its unions to continue bargaining and to reach mutually acceptable agreements. At the same time, we cannot stand by while the dispute shuts down the vital transportation system in Toronto, affecting millions of people and businesses," said Labour Minister Brad Duguid.
The legislation requires all outstanding issues to be sent to binding mediation-arbitration. The TTC and each of its three unions have five days to agree on a mediator-arbitrator, or one will be appointed by the province.
"I'm very pleased we will have transit service restored today," said Toronto Mayor David Miller.
"In fact, TTC workers are returning to their jobs as we speak."
MPP Peter Shurman from Thornhill said there is anger over the strike.
"My anger is an expression of what I'm hearing in Toronto. People are angry at the union, they are angry at the mayor David Miler, they are angry at TTC chair Adam Giambrone. They are angry at the point that essential service are being heard."
Conservative Leader John Tory said union members should consider whether their executive acted appropriately.
"The average operator or driver would not have found it reasonable to start this strike without consideration of the travelling public," Tory told reporters.
"I think it might be up to them to take some of their leadership out in the back and give them a horsewhipping."
NDP Leader Howard Hampton said he believes in collective bargaining and that back-to-work legislation should be avoided unless you have extraordinary circumstances.
"We support this legislation. We do not support it without reservation," he said.
"When people who work for the TTC and fear for their job, that is a real issue."
"There are some issues that probably cannot be dealt with at the negotiating table."
The transit strike stranded thousands of people in downtown Toronto on Friday night and set the stage for traffic chaos during the weekend.
"I want to apologize on behalf of the TTC to our customers," TTC chairman Adam Giambrone said Saturday. "We didn't expect this contract to be turned down. Clearly we were not able to get word out fast enough. . . to thousands of people who were downtown last night."
Union president Bob Kinnear cited dissatisfaction with worker safety as the union's reason for withdrawing service.
"We have assessed the situation and decided that we will not expose our members to the dangers of assaults from angry and irrational members of the public," he said in a news release.
"The reports from our members of increases in threats and abuse from passengers last weekend, after we gave our original 48-hours' notice, has left us no choice but to withdraw our services immediately.
"We have a legal responsibility to protect the safety of our members and so does the TTC."
Following the passage of the law, officials from the union representing signal maintenance, communications and electrical workers at the Toronto Transit Commission, said they are looking to reach a negotiated settlement despite back-to-work legislation.
"We believe fundamentally in free collective bargaining, which benefits workers, employers and overall labour relations in the workplace," said CUPE Local 2 President Mike Santos. "To that end, we are expecting to meet as scheduled with TTC negotiators to resolve the outstanding issues."
Natinal Post
* This is similar to the State Senate in the USA.
Also note, that in the last 30 years they have met on Sunday only 6 times or so. I can't find exact numbers, but they are saying Sunday Sittings are next to non-existant.