Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

Radio Free Saint John WEB ColourThe seven unionized workers at MBS Radio in Saint John, New Brunswick called an end to their 686-day strike last week. Their employer responded with a lock-out notice, saying they will not be allowed to return to work without a collective agreement.

The Saint John Seven joined the Canadian Media Guild in 2011 and spent almost a year trying to negotiate a fair first contract. They went on strike on June 25, 2012.

Gary Stackhouse, one of the striking workers and the president of the Private Radio branch of the CMG, says the seven have made a complaint to the Canada Industrial Relations Board alleging that the company has been bargaining in bad faith, seeking only to break the union and get rid of the workers who organized. A CIRB hearing is scheduled to begin in the first week of June.

In the meantime, Stackhouse is heading to Halifax for a meeting tomorrow with a mediator from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.

Stackhouse says the lengthy strike has only made the seven radio employees more resolute in their fight for a fair deal.

"This battle was never a selfish one. It was never about individuals walking off the job to get a bigger paycheque for themselves," he told Story Board in a phone interview earlier this week.

"It was about the mistreatment of our co-workers and friends and the people who will come after us. We all do this because we believe in private radio. We do it because we love serving our community through private radio."

The seven striking workers, who earn salaries that are roughly half of the national average for private radio, sought the support of local businesses, many of whom joined an advertising boycott against the station. The Halifax-based broadcasting company, the workers contend, has been draining hundreds of thousands of advertising dollars per year from Saint John businesses but failing to put money back into the community in the form of reasonable wages for its employees.

"Our problem with the way Maritime Broadcasting is operating right now is, they expect people to go to school and invest tens of thousands of dollars in their education to become broadcasters and then work at Maritime Broadcasting for $10.58 an hour," said Stackhouse.

"Nobody's prepared to do that. Nobody's prepared to incur those kind of debts and then never be able to pay them back."

You can read more about Saint John Seven's fight for a fair deal on the CMG website.

After nearly a month on the picket line, the seven striking employees of MBS Radio have been back on the air for the past few days. The striking members of the Canadian Media Guild are broadcasting from a web-based station called Radio Free Saint John, playing music as well as using the internet airwaves to get their message out. Yesterday they…
The employees of MBS Radio in Saint John just want a contract.Watch the video, read about the Canadian Media Guild's negotiations with Maritime Broadcasting System on behalf of its employees, follow the campaign on Facebook and if you're inclined to lend your support, send a message to MBS Radio owner Robert Pace.Via CMG.ca.
You've seen it here before. We're not shy about our support for unions, and whether it's the Born Freelancer explaining why unions are boss or a fun video from the Canadian Media Guild demonstrating the sticky situations that unprotected workers find themselves in, we're glad to share.We can write about reasons to join a union until we're blue in…
For those not yet convinced, this video commissioned by the Canadian Media Guild/CWA Canada cheekily illustrates a few good reasons to join a union.Produced by MyFilm Productions, with music by Incompetech, the narrative centres on "Jenny," who is excited to start her new job, only to discover that she was hired to replace a more experienced…
Our post earlier this week about the contract negotiations between the Canadian Media Guild, on behalf of its members, and The Canadian Press focused on what both those bodies are asking for, but what about the employees and their voice in all this? More than two months into negotiations, and after the recent appointment of a conciliator for the…
When the company you're negotiating with starts off by calling its financial situation "dire," it's probably safe to assume you're in for a long and bumpy ride.That's the message that the Canadian Media Guild heard from to The Canadian Press late last year, when it began negotiating with the company on behalf of its members. Their contract was…
For better or worse, the ongoing series of "Robertson v. _____" cases continues. On May 2, a final decision was handed down in the case of "Robertson v. Proquest, Cedrom, Toronto Star Newspapers, Rogers and Canwest." (This decision comes after a tentative settlement reached this January.) Heather Robertson and Kirk Baert of the firm Koskie Minsky…
In a shocking revelation, a study of Huffington Post bloggers by researchers at UC Santa Barbara's Carsey-Wolf Center---which included analyzing 500 press clippings about AOL's $315-million acquisition of HuffPo and a survey of HuffPo's most frequent contributors---found that they think they deserve to be paid for their labour, which requires their…
Since the Greek government undertook austerity measures to begin to deal with its cripping debt, strikes in the country have become a regular occurrence. While we over in North America are used to the idea of work stoppages in areas like education, garbage collection, postal services, and transit, the idea of the entire country's media going on…

Page 1 of 2

1 2