Labour leadership in the wrong direction

15/02/16
Author: 
Mark Gordienk, Steve Hunt, Brian Cochrane and Tom Sigurdson

[ Editors: Some union leaders in BC continue to advocate the wrong direction for working people. The latest example is the letter below that was published in the Vancouver Sun newspaper. Following this letter's misguided opposition to fossil fuel divestment by UBC is a previous response by the Vancouver Ecosocialists to such views. Note further: "UBC board of governors votes against divestment from fossil fuel industry"- CBC News, Feb 15, 2016 12:52 PM PT]

Letter:

“Because I am deeply concerned about climate change, I also feel compelled to ask whether a focus on divestment does not in fact distract us from more effective measures, better aligned with our institutional capacities.”

— Drew Faust, president of Harvard University, Oct. 3, 2013

The University of B.C.’s Board of Governors faces a challenging decision on Feb. 15 — its finance committee recommends rejecting the wishes of students and faculty who voted to ask UBC to divest its shares in coal and other fossil fuel companies.

On one side, arguments that UBC make a symbolic stand by divesting; on the other, clearly the university could suffer a significant financial loss, alienate energy companies that donate funds and their employees — many hundreds if not thousands of graduates of UBC — whose taxes help pay for higher education.

While the debate may be raging at UBC, this is not an academic argument — it affects the lives of real people.

So as union leaders who represent the coal miners, longshore and construction workers, who extract and transport coal as well as other fossil fuels, we say divestment could be a costly mistake — and not only for our members, but for UBC.

We agree on the need to address climate change and transition to lower-carbon consumption, but we disagree that divestment is the way to do so.

We look at the practical impact divestment could have — the loss of our members’ jobs, the reduction in tax revenue that fund not only UBC but our entire education, health care and social program expenditures, and the reality that metallurgical coal is essential to steelmaking (there is no known substitute).

Without steel there would be no wind turbines, no electric cars, no rapid transit vehicles, no cellphones — or a host of other environmentally needed products.

Yet the overwhelming majority of coal mined in B.C. is metallurgical.

It’s also true that divestment could be little more than an empty “feel good” action where other investors buy up UBC’s fossil fuel shares at a discount and nothing changes.

The divestment vote comes at a difficult time for the coal sector: Several B.C. metallurgical coal mines recently closed and others have reduced operations due to low world market coal prices.

That means real and ongoing hardship for coal miners in places like Tumbler Ridge, Sparwood, Elkford, Fernie and more — places where the taxes that coal workers and companies pay cover the cost of schools, hospitals, roads and social programs.

In total, B.C.’s coal sector provides about $715 million in tax revenues to the province and municipalities each year while creating 26,000 direct and indirect jobs from $5.7 billion in economic activity, based on the latest available figures.

Those are significant numbers to put at risk, but divestment proponents don’t seem to care.

In an opinion piece in The Vancouver Sun on Jan. 28, UBC PhD student Alex Hemingway admits that: “We all share responsibility for climate change — fossil fuel users and producers alike. But the fossil fuel industry has played a uniquely destructive role.”

Hemingway doesn’t, however, suggest sharing responsibility, like students and staff stop driving or taking SkyTrain and buses to UBC; or turn off the heat and lights or give up all the computers on campus, because these things all require steel.

Divestment would instead unfairly put the responsibility for climate change almost solely on the backs of our members — and ask them to pay for it with their jobs.

Divestment advocates need to face the reality that UBC, like all of Canada, needs energy and steel to survive.

The current demands made on UBC illustrate another big problem with divestment — it reduces a complex issue into oversimplified feel-good rhetoric, while asking universities to fight the energy sector — a key part of our economy.

Isn’t it better that UBC continue to do the kind of research that has led to more energy efficiency and conservation and to work cooperatively with companies to find new solutions — like carbon capture and storage — to help the world achieve emissions reductions?

Harvard, Yale and Dalhousie universities have rejected divestment calls for many of these reasons.

UBC should do the same — and keep up the valuable work needed to solve our energy future equitably.

Mark Gordienko is president of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada; Steve Hunt is director of the United Steel Workers, Western Canada; Brian Cochrane is business manager at the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 115; Tom Sigurdson is executive director for B.C. Building Trades.


 

Statement of the Vancouver Ecosocialist Group, May 28, 2014: http://ecosocialistsvancouver.org/article/call-unions-bc-defend-province%E2%80%99s-and-world%E2%80%99s-ecosystem

Last month, four leaders of the main construction unions in British Columbia issued a statement in support of the Northern Gateway tar sands pipeline. The statement is signed by the Teamsters, Plumbers, Operating Engineers and Labourers’ unions. The text is enclosed below.

Now the same four leaders have come out in support of Kinder Morgan’s proposed Trans Mountain tar sands pipeline.

These two statements are an occasion to remind ourselves of why we should oppose the climate-wrecking agenda of the fossil fuel industry and its government backers. We believe there is a better way forward for unions and for society.

Climate science is telling us that society must move rapidly to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. That means lessening and eventually eliminating most extraction and burning of fossil fuels. We must end the reckless and excessive production and consumption of ‘things’ that only serves to fill the pockets of large corporations. We believe the unions in BC as well as the political party they support, the NDP, should be developing audacious policies for the alternative economy that is needed. But instead, the opposite is happening:

* Many BC unions are supporting a key part of the fossil fuel industry agenda—increased fracking of natural gas in the northeast of the province and the creation of an entirely new industry, LNG, on the northwest coast. First Nations in the northeast say that fracking is destroying their air and water as well as the fish and wildlife they have depended upon for millennia. A new report of the prestigious Council of Canadian Academies is another reminder of the dangerous environmental consequences of fracking. We should heed these voices.

* Another industry—export of thermal coal (mined in the U.S.)—is surging ahead. Instead of more coal, we need more action on transition to a renewable energy economy. Unions have a vital role to play in assuring that new jobs for coal miners and new economies for their communities are created.

* A third part of the industry agenda is increased transport through communities of highly dangerous trains carrying crude oil, tar sands bitumen and refined fossil fuel products.

* And finally, there are the two proposed pipelines to carry Alberta tar sands bitumen to the BC coast. Awareness and concern over Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain line is growing, as evidenced by the big rally that took place in Burnaby on April 12, organized by Burnaby Residents Opposed to Kinder Morgan (BROKE). In northern BC, meanwhile, residents of the province might have hoped that Enbridge’s Northern Gateway pipeline will be consigned to the dustbin, once and for all, following the April 12 plebiscite vote in Kitimat against it. The project is already facing the ‘Wall of Opposition’ that First Nations peoples and other residents in northern BC have created. But Enbridge is pressing ahead, and it has the federal government in its back pocket, so we are obliged to continue to organize against it. On May 10, thousands of people rallied in Vancouver and across British Columbia to say ‘no’ to tar sands pipelines.

Trade union and NDP leaders should pay heed to the opposition to Northern Gateway by First Nations, by the citizens of Kitimat (who voted by 58 per cent against the project on April 12) and by growing numbers of citizens in the Lower Mainland and along the pipeline routes.

The Northern Gateway statement follows upon a memorandum of understanding signed by Enbridge Inc. (the parent company of the project) and the four unions on April 15 in support of the pipeline and vaunting the job opportunities it will create. No doubt, that ‘positive’ message was a consequence of the blow that Northern Gateway received from the plebiscite in Kitimat and the follow-up vote by Kitimat District Council to oppose it.

In their Northern Gateway statement, the four union leaders write, “It’s true, Northern Gateway is opposed by some in the environmental community, and we respect those opinions.” But the statement disregards the strongly held views not only of the environment movement but also of the vast majority of First Nations in opposing the project.

The letter says, “…And our precious natural environment — on land and on water — will be safeguarded with the toughest environmental standards ever applied on an oil pipeline.” We disagree that Enbridge and the federal government can be entrusted to protect land and water. The same union leaders are supporting another fossil fuel megaproject that will be highly destructive to air and water--natural gas fracking in the BC northeast and liquefied natural gas on the coast.

Late last year, Unifor, teachers and other unions in BC signed the Save The Fraser Declaration, a landmark statement first issued three years ago that opposes Northern Gateway. The Declaration affirms the importance of preserving and protecting the Fraser River watershed and the coastal waters and lands of the Pacific Northwest. Unions are beginning to speak out against the Trans Mountain pipeline. Two national unions—CUPE and Unifor—took stands at their national conventions last year against oil and gas fracking.

All this and more is a good foundation for us to build upon. We know that workers and union members in the province want a healthy future for us and our children. So we need to fight for a different kind of economy and world, one in which the needs of every human can be met without trashing the planet on whose health we all depend for our survival. That includes insisting that workers displaced by economic changes be guaranteed training and alternative replacement income and employment.

‘Jobs’ and ‘the environment’ are not either/or propositions. As a current saying has it, ‘There are no good jobs on a dead planet.’ It so happens that the most plentiful and the most satisfying of jobs--the only ones that mean anything in the long term--are those that will meet our duty to care for and nourish our natural surroundings and our fellow human beings.

www.ecosocialistsvancouver.org

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Appendix (for Tyee editor reference)

If it’s built right, this can set us up for next century

By Lionel Railton, Roy Finley, Greg Harris and  Rob Kinsley. Published in the op-ed page, Vancouver Sun, April 22, 2014.

Canada’s trade union movement has always fought to ensure working people and their families benefit from economic growth. That basic value helped to build the country we love with a strong middle- class, good public services, and protections for workers. And it’s why the four national unions — and the 300,000 Canadian working women and men we represent have signed a Memorandum of Understanding ( MOU) with Northern Gateway Pipeline.

Northern Gateway is a nationbuilding project that has the potential to secure long- term energy and economic security for the next 100 years. But only — and this is critical — if it is built right and for the benefit of average families and the communities in which we live.

That is what the MOU we have signed is all about: building a project that benefits hardworking Canadians, supports local economies, and protects our natural environment.

The MOU ensures that our members — the most experienced pipeline construction workforce anywhere in the world — are able to build Northern Gateway to the highest possible safety and environmental standards. As a result of the MOU, trade union members are guaranteed a minimum of 2,100 person years of employment on the project. It also guarantees that our workers will be protected with strong health and safety rules. And when our members benefit with good paycheques, good jobs, and good benefits, our families and the communities we live in benefit too.

In addition, the MOU supports Northern Gateway’s commitment to jobs and lasting social benefits for aboriginal communities. It helps ensure new training opportunities for young people — opportunities that will last them a lifetime. Already, because of programs sponsored by Northern Gateway, hundreds of Northern British Columbians — including those in Aboriginal communities — are learning new skills, and preparing for new careers.

As trade union members, we also place a high value on protecting our natural environment. The trade union movement in Canada is at the forefront of environmental protection, building alliances with environmental organizations to create green jobs and a greener future for our country.

It’s true, Northern Gateway is opposed by some in the environmental community, and we respect those opinions. But we are extremely confident that Northern Gateway will meet higher environmental tests than have ever been placed on an economic development project of its kind in our country’s history.

The independent review conducted by the Joint Review Panel of the National Energy Board was the most comprehensive environmental review for an oil pipeline Canada has ever seen. And the 209 tough conditions that panel put on the project place a high priority on environmental and social values.

The bottom line: We are confident that Northern Gateway will be a project that is economically and environmentally responsible. Working people will benefit with good jobs, good paycheques and good protections. Communities will benefit from those jobs and the enormous economic activity they will inject into the local economy. Aboriginal and First Nations communities are owners of the pipeline through groundbreaking equity partnership agreements. And our precious natural environment — on land and on water — will be safeguarded with the toughest environmental standards ever applied on an oil pipeline.

For these reasons, our trade unions are proud to support Northern Gateway. Because when working people and their communities benefit — as they do with this project — then we all benefit with a stronger, fairer, and more prosperous country for every Canadian, in every part of the county.

Lionel Railton is International Representative at the International Union of Operating Engineers. Roy Finley is Director of Construction for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Greg Harris is Sub-Regional Manager at the Labourers International Union of North America. Rob Kinsley is the International Representative, Western Canada, of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry of the United States and Canada.