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A project of the Toronto & York Region Labour Council in partnership with George Brown College.

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Enjoy the 2008 Workers of Colour Conference Photo Gallery!




Academic Upgrading: Click here to find out more about this dynamic program!


One million people make less than $10 an hour in Ontario. Our communities are changing. Not just the faces or languages spoken, but the opportunities are different than before. We are tired of being told that this is a just-in-time economy and a disposable society and we should get used to it. We want those in power to value who we are and what we do.

  • RESPECT my right to a minimum wage of at least $10.00 now!
  • RESPECT my right to have a stable full-time job
  • RESPECT my skills and experience, wherever I gained them
  • RESPECT my rights to have housing and childcare
  • RESPECT my right to have a union voice at work
  • RESPECT my rights for social benefits, if I need them

For upcoming Town Hall and Community meetings - click here

Background on the Respect Campaign - click here

Photos from the Respect Campaign Press conference, and Parkdale meeting, visit www.amillionreasons.ca


A THOUSAND DAY WAIT FOR TEN DOLLARS?

The provincial government has finally bowed to public pressure on the minimum wage, but their plan leaves over a million people working at poverty wages for at least three more years. Finance Minister Greg Sorbara announced the phasing in of seventy-five cent annual increases starting next March 31st with the rate becoming $10.25 in 2010.

Even though it will be delayed far too long, winning a 28% increase in the Minimum Wage is a great victory. It would never have happened without the tremendous mobilization of labour and community activists, and the willingness of ordinary people to use their voice - and their votes - to send a message to the McGuinty government.

But nagging questions remain unanswered: Why do politicians think it is all right that wealthy companies pay poverty wages to a million Ontarians? Why do so many people have to juggle two or three jobs to make ends meet? Can’t there be any constraints on those who direct the Walmartization of our society?

So the minimum wage campaign will continue, and we want everyone to keep signing petition cards, and turning them back in. In the next phase of this effort we won’t just be talking about a minimum. We will be talking about fixing employment standards and need for people to have collective rights at work. We will be developing key demands for government action to address the impact of global economic forces in the 21st century. Livable wages, decent working conditions and basic benefits are key to our quality of life, and the future of generations to come. The principle that work should be rewarded is one worth fighting for.

To go to the Minimum Wage campaign page, visit www.amillionreasons.ca

To send a message to your MPP and the Premier, visit www.forthepublicgood.ca

Read “It’s about more than just a $10 minimum wage” - Labour Council President John Cartwright’s op-ed article in the Toronto Star