VALE
Vale
Steelworkers Welcome Ruling in Complaint Against Vale
Vale-Steelworkers Talks Break Off in Voisey's Bay
Steelworkers Ratify Five-Year Collective Agreement With Vale
Ratification Votes Set, USW and Vale Agree on Terms of Bad Faith Complaint
Inco Name Fades into History
Global Support Reaffirmed for Steelworkers Strike Against Vale
Union Support to Converge at Sudbury Rally
Join the Fight in Sudbury!
Port Colborne Steelworkers Vote 98% to Reject Vale Offer
USW, Vale Inco Representatives to Hold Exploratory Discussions
What Happened to Prized Nickel Producer?
Vale Executives’ Attacks on Workers Bad for Business, Report Reveals
Steelworkers File Bad-Faith Bargaining Complaint Against Vale Inco
USW Hopeful Bargaining with Vale Can Resume in Voisey’s Bay
VALE INCO STRIKE: 1978 Different Than Current Strike
It’s Time for both Steelworkers and Vale Inco to Say “No Pre-Conditions” and Go Back to Bargaining Now.
Steelworkers Take Protest to Big Apple
Miners Come to Parliament Hill as Foreign Investment Bill is Introduced
USW Names Vale CEO Winner of Global Bad Corporate Citizen Award
Steelworkers Fight Back, while Vale Discredited
Petition Denouncing Vale's Attacks 'Catching Fire' on Twitter
Vale Gives Brazilians Increase, But Demands Big Concessions from Canadians
Global Union Pickets Vale in London
USW Welcomes Mayor’s Call For Good-Faith Bargaining
Vale Fails to Release Deal Info
Vale Q3 Report Belies Need for Major Concessions from Canadian Workers
Steelworkers Confront Vale Customer in Sweden
Steelworkers Protest Arrival of Vale Shipment in German Port - Union Going Global to Track Product and Reach Vale Customers
Inco Office Staff Get the Shaft: USW
Steelworkers say Vale Inco is Undercutting Strike
Thousands Show Support for Striking Vale Inco Workers
African Trade Unions Tell Global Mining Giant Vale – Improve Your Labor Practices or Stay Out of Africa!
An Open Letter to Our Neighbours and Our Community
Striking Union Outraged with Inco Vow to Start Production
Vale Inco Strikers Receive Overwhelming Support and Help from Federal NDP
Striking Steelworkers Delegation Finds Support Among Brazilian Unions.
Brazilian President Takes Aim at Vale SA
Inco Workers Won’t Take a Step Backwards
Steelworkers Get Line Support
Voisey’s Bay Joins Other Locals on Picket Line
Clement 'Disappointingly Misinformed' - Letter from Sudbury Mayor to Clement
Leo Gerard Says Strike Is About Sustaining Community in Sudbury
Vale Inco Saved Sudbury from Becoming Valley of Death: Clement - Comment on this Story
Hometown Boy, Gerard, to Join Pickets Friday
Resentment Builds, Causing Workers to Strike Back
Steelworker Int'l Head coming to Canada to Join Inco Picket Line in his Hometown of Sudbury
Picket Lines Go Up at Vale Inco Operations
Momentum Grows for Sudbury Steelworkers’ call for Fair Deal Now
USW Local 6200 Announces the Result of the 2009 Ratification Vote
Over 85% of Vale Inco Workers Reject Final Offer and Prepare for Possibly Long Strike
USW Workers at Vale Inco Overwhelmingly Vote to Strike
“We Just Can't Accept It,” Sudbury Family tells Vale-Inco as They Vote to Reject Cut-Back Offer
Inco CEO Predicts Short-lived Strike
Sudbury Steelworkers Vow to Protect Contract
Vale-Inco's Voisey's Bay Workers Reject Contract Offer Vote for Strike
Vale-Inco Workers Vote Overwhelmingly to Go on Strike and Global Union Declares Unanimous Support
Union Steels Itself for Strike, as Profitable Vale Insists on Major Concessions
Vale Inco Tactics Troubling, USW Union Says
Vale Workers May Strike Over Benefits in Canada - Brazil Publication Says
Strike Would Hit Community Hard
Major Strike at Vale Inco Looms
Vale Inco Strikers Hold Demo Against Hiding Vale Inco


Hometown Boy, Gerard, to Join Pickets Friday

By Carol Mulligan, Sun Media:  Sudbury Star, 16 July 2009 

International President of United Steelworkers will bring his determination and passion to the fight against one of the most profitable multinationals that is threatening the viability of its Canadian communities, and demanding long-term dramatic cuts from it’s workforce.

The president of United Steelworkers International will walk the picket line Friday morning with striking members of USW Local 6500 .

Sudbury native Leo Gerard, who went from working at Inco Ltd.'s nickel smelter at age 18 to heading an international union, will visit strikers at the entrance to the Copper Cliff Smelter Complex at 10 a. m.

Under his leadership, Gerard has moved the former United Steelworkers of America to become the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, CLC.

He is credited with launching initiatives that increased the union's membership by 65 per cent to 350,000 workers. The USW has also won tariff relief that helped save the American steel industry, a Workers First law in Canada that gives workers top priority for consideration in corporate bankruptcies and the lan- Westray Bill that makes corporations criminally liable when they kill or seriously injure their employees or members of the public.

But to USW Local 6500 president John Fera, Gerard is, was and always will be "a Sudbury boy, a Local 6500 boy. His heart is here." Fera expects Gerard to tell more than 3,050 strikers in Sudbury and another 150 with USW Local 6200 in Port Colborne that "locally and nationally and internationally, we're all in this thing together."

Wednesday was the third full day on the picket line for Steelworkers who began striking Monday at 12:01 a. m. after their collective agreement with Vale Inco Ltd. expired. Many people had predicted that was how more than three months of negotiations would wind up because there didn't seem to be much progress during contract talks.

Fera says support for the union's bargaining committee, which recommended that members reject Vale Inco's settlement proposal, is strong. "Everyone knows what the fight is about, and people are solid and very, very supportive of each other," he said.

Meanwhile, Local 6500 members continue to picket at Vale Inco's Sudbury operations. So far, the union is preventing anyone - including members of sister union USW Local 2020 -- from entering the sites.

Staff and management employees are working inside the plants for days at a time, and are being ferried to work by helicopter at a reported cost of $1,200 an hour. Fera expects Vale Inco will apply for an injunction soon to force strikers to allow certain people through picket lines.

Last week, Vale Inco laid off 54 non-union employees, and Fera says he has heard from some of them and others that they would like to join the union. He says that is not outside the realm of possibility.  "Anything's possible," he said. "I've had (some) staff talk to me and say, 'At some point, we may want to sign a card.' "

Vale Inco is treating its nonunion employees in a way "that really befuddles us," said the union president. "Why they would treat their own like that?"

Some of the people laid off last week had as many as 28 and 20 years with the mining company.

For more information, click here

 

 

francais
USW home
District 3
District 5
District 6
Wood Council
USW@Work June 2010
National Director''s Update June 2010
Building for tomorrow''s jobs
Scholarships
Blue Green Canada
Workers Uniting
1_news room
1_womenof steel
Political Action