CUPE applauds Quebec City mayor’s decision
20 septembre 2005
Québec City, Tuesday September 20, 2005
The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) applauds Quebec
City Mayor Jean-Paul Lallier for filing a complaint against Global
television with the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). The mayor, who was once
communications minister with the Quebec government, notes it is
obvious Global does not respect the terms of its broadcasting
licence, nor does it respect commitments made to the population of
this province and more particularly to the citizens of Quebec
city. CUPE can only agree.
Background
When they applied for the license, CanWest Global committed to
making CKMI its headquarters in Québec. At the time, they promised
to hire 75 people as soon as the station opened, the majority of
whom would be located in Québec City. Global even promised 100
employees by the second year, including several additional
positions in Québec City.
In December 1996, at the CRTC public hearings in Montreal, Glen O’
Farrell, then a senior executive at CanWest Global, could not have
stated it more clearly: « Our commitment, on an employment level,
is to create, as of Year One, approximately 75 new jobs, of which
the majority are in Québec City. In Year Two, that grows to 100,
with additional employment created in Québec City » (page 1147
of the CRTC transcript).
After the transfer of production to Toronto, presumably on
September 26, Global will have no more than 8 fulltime employees
and one half-time employee at CKMI in Québec City a far cry from
their projected target. We have to wonder what will become of
whats left of the local production promised by Global.
Global in Québec
In the province of Québec, Global has a presence in Montreal,
Québec City and Sherbrooke, with a total of about 125 employees, a
hundred of whom are in Montreal. Every Global employee in Québec is
a member of CUPE.
CUPE
CUPE has 7,000 members in communications in Québec and is also
present in several other sectors, notably health and social
services, education, urban and air transport, Québec Crown
Corporations and public agencies, hydroelectricity and
municipalities. With about 100,000 members, CUPE is the largest
member of the FTQ.