he wave of public sector
organizing reflected the growing discontent among Canadian
workers. In the 1960s, a slowing economy with rising
inflation collided with worker's expectations to share
in the strong corporate profits of the post-war years.
Management and governments, for the most part, continued
strenuously to resist union demands. Despite labour's
hard won changes in labour legislation, corporations
fought union recognition and especially the settlement
of first contracts. Injunctions against strikes and
picketers became commonplace, as the courts seemed
regularly to rule in favour of employers. When strikes
did occur many of the old intimidation tactics of earlier
years reappeared. Companies specializing in strike breaking
found their services in demand, and, in the opinion of
union activists, police intervened too frequently to
crush picket lines and intimidate strikers and their leaders.
Strikes were frequent in the 1960s. But differences
in the kinds of strikes compared to earlier periods in
Canadian history were noticeable. In 1966, when the number
of strikes (617) and strikers involved peaked at levels
higher than those of the 1940s, they did so within a system
of contract collective bargaining. For example, many strikes
revolved around contract renewals -not over the right to
collective bargaining itself. Contract bargaining was
supposed to ensure that strikes were illegal during the
life of a contract. However, as workers' discontent deepened,
more and more of them walked off the job illegally in what
were known as wild-cat strikes. In the 1960s, wild-cat
strikes were a growing phenomenon; indeed, these strikes
accounted for one third of disputes reported in 1966. Workers
ignored the legalities of their contracts and struck to protest
speed-ups on the assembly line, the firing of a fellow worker,
and slow resolution of grievances or contract negotiations.
In some instances, wild-cat strikers and their leaders found
themselves at odds with one another. The contract system put
union leaders in a compromising position, because they were
held legally responsible for the actions of their members.
Therefore, if the leaders endorsed these actions, they risked
arrest and their union faced financial penalties. On the other
hand, failure to support the strikers created a dangerous rift
between them and their membership. This dilemma was one of the
negative consequences of the "Great Compromise" by which labour
had won important collective bargaining rights in the World War II era.
|