Tag Archives: Strikes & Labor Disputes

French unrest spreads to Reunion

BBC: French unrest spreads to Reunion

Violence has flared on the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion during demonstrations against high prices.

Police fired tear gas to disperse stone-throwing youths at a protest near Reunion’s capital, Saint-Denis.

Thousands marched across the island to push for a 20% cut in the prices of essential goods and an extra 200 euros (£178) a month for low-paid workers.

The unrest came after unions on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe had agreed to end a 44-day strike.

Nigeria: National Strike: We Will Mobilise Against Labour, NUT – PADGOG

Leadership Nigeria: National Strike: We Will Mobilise Against Labour, NUT – PADGOG
March 9th, 2009

Ahead of the impending national strike by teachers over agitation for increase in salaries and other claims, a socio- political group, Patriots for Democracy and Good Governance (PADGOG), has threatened to mobilise millions of Nigerians to march against the leadership of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) if it did not shelve the idea in the interest of the nation.

Newspaper strike at U Oregon ends

Emerald humbled by support, looking forward

Last night, representatives of the Emerald’s editorial staff had a productive conversation with our Board of Directors for the first time in weeks, if not far longer. Together, we agreed to move forward in mediated discussions on the terms of a publisher’s contract.

Newspaper strike at U Oregon

Inside Higher Ed: Newspaper Strike

The student editorial staff of the Oregon Daily Emerald went on strike Wednesday morning, prompting a newly hired publisher to step down before his first day on the job.

The University of Oregon students expressed concerns about the publisher’s role, saying that a new reporting structure would undermine the independent newspaper’s autonomy. Under the new arrangement, the paper’s student editor would report to the publisher, not to the Board of Directors as she now does.

Puerto Rican Teachers: “The Long Way is the Short Way”

Labor Notes: Puerto Rican Teachers: “The Long Way is the Short Way”

Last February, nearly 25,000 teachers closed Puerto Rico’s schools with a 10-day strike. The strike and ensuing fights peaked decades of slowly building momentum for a reform caucus.

One year ago, in late February, teachers in Puerto Rico defied a strike ban and embarked on an all-out fight for the life of their union.

The 10-day walk-out, which capped 27 months of fruitless negotiations, set in motion months of turmoil for the 40,000-member Federacion de Maestros de Puerto Rico. The government decertified the FMPR as punishment for the strike, and the Service Employees attempted a raid. In late October teachers were asked to vote between SEIU and “no union,” as the government barred FMPR from the ballot.

Nigeria: NUT strike: Ogun backs out of new pay for teachers

Punch: NUT strike: Ogun backs out of new pay for teachers
By Ademola Oni
Published: Sunday, 1 Mar 2009

Owing to dwindling allocations from the Federation Account, the Ogun State Government is said to have backed out of its earlier decision to pay the 27.5 per cent increase in the salaries of teachers in the state.

Guadeloupe union: Talks smooth, strike could end

Guadeloupe union: Talks smooth, strike could end

BASSE-TERRE, Guadeloupe (AP) — Negotiations between the government and protesters angry over high prices and other concerns on this French Caribbean island are going well and a six-week general strike could soon end, union leaders said Saturday.

Part of the discussion in Guadeloupe has focused on the lack of teachers and potable water, said Richard Slessel, head of the Les Vertes union.

Nigeria: Strike – Negotiation Between Teachers, Osun Government Deadlocked

Daily Independent (Lagos): Nigeria: Strike – Negotiation Between Teachers, Osun Government Deadlocked

Osogbo — A peace parley between Osun State teachers, under the aegis of Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) and the state government, led by the state Commissioner for Education, Abdul Jelili Adesiyan, was reported to have ended in deadlock.

On the picket line

Workers World: On the picket line

Workers march for jobs in Illinois

Over 5,500 workers and their supporters stretched more than eight blocks during a “Put America Back to Work” march in Granite City, Ill., on Feb. 10. They included laid-off steelworkers in Granite City and laid-off auto workers from Decatur and Fenton, Mo. More than 2,500 members of Steel Workers Local 1899 were laid off from U.S. Steel-Granite City Works in December. The march, sponsored by local and state labor unions and several community groups, was held to support passage of the federal stimulus bill. The workers, whose output is between 30 and 35 percent construction-grade steel, supported the bill because they hope it will help them get back to work. In its report on the march, the St. Louis Suburban Journals noted that “‘shovel-ready’ infrastructure projects such as roads, bridges and schools could begin within 90 to 120 days” after the bill is signed into law and “each billion dollars spent on infrastructure generates $6 billion in economic activity and provides 34,000 ‘good-paying’ jobs.” (Feb. 10) Imagine if there were marches of laid-off workers demanding jobs all over this country. Better yet in Washington, D.C.

Ireland: Unions to discuss next move after huge Dublin protest

Irish Times: Unions to discuss next move after huge Dublin protest
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BALLOTS ON strike action are expected to be on the agenda when the executive council of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (Ictu) meets tomorrow to consider its next move following Saturday’s massive protest march in Dublin.

Zimbabwe: Unions call end to teachers’ strike

newzimbabwe.com: Unions call end to teachers’ strike

ZIMBABWE’S teachers are ending their strike action and returning to classrooms starting Monday, union leaders announced.

Teachers have been on strike for the greater part of the last year in a dispute over pay. Exams from as far back as June 2008 remain unmarked and aid agencies say “a generation is at risk” unless urgent reforms are made to stop the rot in the education system.

Palestinian teachers’ union to submit demands by weekend

Ma’an News Agency: Palestinian teachers’ union to submit demands by weekend
Date: 16 / 02 / 2009 Time: 10:58

Bethlehem – Ma’an – The secretary-general of a Palestinian teachers’ union told Ma’an on Sunday the union would submit a list of demands to the Palestinian Authority by Thursday.

West Bank: Warning strike by civil servants

IHT: Warning strike by civil servants
The Associated Press
Published: February 15, 2009

RAMALLAH, West Bank: Thousands of civil servants in the West Bank are observing a one-day warning strike because their salaries are two weeks overdue.

British Columbia: Teachers want top court to quash strike definition

Vancouver Sun: Teachers want top court to quash strike definition
Appeal to be sought over ‘political protest’ rulings

Published: Saturday, February 14, 2009

The B.C. Teachers’ Federation will seek an appeal of a court decision that ruled the union’s one-day walkout in 2002 was an illegal strike, while the teachers saw it as a political protest.

Nigeria: DPA lauds Lagos House for averting teachers’ strike

The Sun: DPA lauds Lagos House for averting teachers’ strike

Lagos chapter of the Democratic Peoples’ Alliance (DPA) has commended the House of Assembly for averting a teachers’ strike in the state by intervening in the face-off between the State Ministry of Education and the Nigerian Teachers Union (NUT).

Students Protest at N.Y.U.

The New York Times: Students Protest at N.Y.U.

Several dozen students occupied a cafeteria at New York University on Wednesday night, barricading themselves inside with tables and chairs and chanting a list of demands.

Strikes Disrupt French Universities

The Chronicle News Blog: Strikes Disrupt French Universities

Universities across France experienced widespread disruptions today, in response to calls from faculty unions and student groups to protest plans for reforming the higher-education system. The government’s proposals provoked opposition from the outset, which intensified recently over moves to modify a law governing the hiring and promotion of researchers engaged in teaching. The change would allow universities to dictate how those staff members allocated their time between teaching and other activities.

Kenyan teachers call off strike

BBC: Kenyan teachers call off strike

The strike affected millions of Kenyan primary school children

Teachers in Kenya have ended a 10-day strike after the government offered to double their salaries over the next three years.

The strike by more than 200,000 primary school teachers led to the closure of most primary schools in the country.

Massachusetts: Judge orders teachers to pay $100,000 for 2007 strike

Wickedlocal.com: Judge orders teachers to pay $100,000 for 2007 strike

Quincy teachers who went out on strike illegally in June 2007 have been ordered by a judge to pay a $100,000 fine.

The settlement amount represents an estimate of what the strike cost the school department, between grievances filed by other school unions – whose members lost workdays – and in things such as wasted food and pay for police officers assigned to watch over picket lines.

Ontario: At last! York strike is over

Toronto Star: At last! York strike is over

The longest running strike at an English speaking Canadian university has come to an end.

The Liberal government, with the support of the Progressive Conservatives, voted for Bill 145 today, ending the three-month long York University strike.

The vote was 61 for and 8 against. All the nay votes came from members of the New Democratic Party who had vigorously opposed an imposed settlement to the strike.

The bill was introduced by Labour Minister Peter Fonseca. Royal assent – the final stamp of approval to make the bill law – was received at 1 p.m.