Local 1328 representing 2000 education support workers for the Toronto Catholic District School Board.
We have members who work in many different positions; they include Education Assistants, Secretaries, Clerk Typists, Library Technicians, IT Technicians, Child and Youth Workers, Student Supervisors, Adult ESL Instructors, ESL Nursery Ins
Local 1328 representing 2000 education support workers for the Toronto Catholic District School Board.
We have members who work in many different positions; they include Education Assistants, Secretaries, Clerk Typists, Library Technicians, IT Technicians, Child and Youth Workers, Student Supervisors, Adult ESL Instructors, ESL Nursery Instructors, these are just a few of our 130 different job classifications.
We are here supporting healthy and productive learning environments for our students and school communities. Our 2000 members work in our elementary and secondary schools, the Catholic Education Centre, board sites and warehouses.
“Union solidarity is based on the principle that union members are equal and deserve mutual respect at all levels. Any behaviour that creates conflict prevents us from working together to strengthen our union.
As unionists, mutual respect, cooperation and understanding are our goals. We should neither condone nor tolerate behaviour that
“Union solidarity is based on the principle that union members are equal and deserve mutual respect at all levels. Any behaviour that creates conflict prevents us from working together to strengthen our union.
As unionists, mutual respect, cooperation and understanding are our goals. We should neither condone nor tolerate behaviour that undermines the dignity or self-esteem of any individual or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive environment.
Discriminatory speech or conduct which is racist, sexist, transphobic or homophobic hurts and thereby divides us. So too, does discrimination on the basis of ability, age, class, religion, language and ethnic origin.
Sometimes discrimination takes the form of harassment. Harassment means using real or perceived power to abuse, devalue or humiliate. Harassment should not be treated as a joke. The uneasiness and resentment that it creates are not feelings that help us grow as a union.
Discrimination and harassment focus on characteristics that make us different; and they reduce our capacity to work together on shared concerns such as decent wages, safe working conditions, and justice in the workplace, society and in our union.
CUPE’s policies and practices must reflect our commitment to equality. Members, staff and elected officers must be mindful that all persons deserve dignity, equality and respect.”
The land on which we live and work is Toronto, a name with shared origins, one of which is the Wendat word for ‘plenty.’ As education workers, we recognize that we have been given much to appreciate – a home, a place to work, a community. For this, we are grateful to the Creator from whom we have received these gifts. We also recognize that in our faith is a tumultuous history with these gifts – the land and the people. By gathering, we recognize that history. We recognize that this land is the traditional territory of the Anishinabek (Ah-Nish-In-Ah-Bek), the Haudenosaunee (Hoh-Den-Uh-Shoh-Nee) Confederacy, the Huron-Wendat, the Mississaugas, and the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nations.
We recognize and express gratitude that this land which they have stewarded for many years was done so in the spirit of the Dish With One Spoon wampum belt covenant, to ensure the land and its resources was shared, protected, and maintained by the people. We acknowledge that it was taken from them through the signing of Treaty 13, a treaty for which we must work towards reconciliation. As brothers and sisters not only in labour, but also in our stewardship of this land, we ought to stand together and act with the same regard of the land we were given – take only what we need, leave enough for others, keep the shared territory clean, all without conflict. Only then can we do the work we were called to while honouring the memory of those who came before.

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