Coolibop
Active Member
Did we stay up until the last possible moment a strike was possible?CBC's take on the non-strike:
Did we stay up until the last possible moment a strike was possible?CBC's take on the non-strike:
I remember the last strike when my father was still working for the TTC.
We got an automated call from Bob Kinnear telling 113 Members that as of 12:01 am the union would be on strike. That message came around 9 pm.
It went on to tell union members not to report to work the next day and await further instructions relating to pickets.
Eventually when they went back to work it was interesting to watch the buses start to roll out of Birchmount division.
If it means that the city will be inconvenienced, well, it sucks, but one rarely makes progress without causing disruption in the process. Workers need to look out for their own interests first and foremost, because if they don't, you can rest assured no one else will, either.
What I think should be illegal is the ability to legislate striking workers back to work. What good is the right to strike if your strike can be called off by a third party if it's deemed inconvenient? That's a farce.
lmao, driving would be hell. Today has been my worst commute since the 401 closed a few months ago. People say drive to the GO to stations that either have zero parking or 20 spots max.There are alternatives, such as taxis, Ubers, carpooling, driving, personal transportation such as bikes and scooters, and GO Transit, so it is not as apocalyptic as you seem to be suggesting.
N.B. I seem to recall that it was not very long ago that we were quite content with shutting down the economy for 2 years during the pandemic. To frame workers striking for even a few weeks as some kind of attack on small businesses after COVID feels pretty disingenuous. If we were content with shutting down businesses to protect people's health, surely a bit of inconvenience so that people can attain better working conditions should be an absolute cakewalk.
Sounds to me like the TTC is pretty damn essential, and therefore the safest and most socially responsible way to avoid the carnage of a TTC strike is to stop being cheap bastards and give them what they want... Just a thought.
There are alternatives, such as taxis, Ubers, carpooling, driving, personal transportation such as bikes and scooters, and GO Transit, so it is not as apocalyptic as you seem to be suggesting.
As I mentioned earlier, some of the asks seem unreasonable. (routes having hard boundaries at city lines) With housing prices and the shift to gig work a lot of people cross boundaries, especially with the onefare changes.Since we don't have all the details of 'the ask', I'm not clear that that is the right answer.
I'm all for a living wage (or better) and for decent benefit, vacation etc.
Those I'd happily support, but no one should get 'carte blanche'...... surely every person thinks 1M per year sounds nice, hell why not 2M or 10M? I realize that's not what we're talking about here, but a responsible take surely requires knowing what the ask is before demanding it be granted.
There are alternatives, such as taxis, Ubers, carpooling, driving, personal transportation such as bikes and scooters, and GO Transit, so it is not as apocalyptic as you seem to be suggesting.
N.B. I seem to recall that it was not very long ago that we were quite content with shutting down the economy for 2 years during the pandemic. To frame workers striking for even a few weeks as some kind of attack on small businesses after COVID feels pretty disingenuous. If we were content with shutting down businesses to protect people's health, surely a bit of inconvenience so that people can attain better working conditions should be an absolute cakewalk.