Wartime Labour Relations Regulations

The Wartime Labour Relations Regulations, adopted by Order in Council P.C. 1003 on 17 February 1944, was a wartime measure introduced during World War II in Canada by the Liberal government of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. It was the first in Canada to legally recognize the existence of unions and to force employers to negotiate with organized workers. It was drafted loosely on the American Wagner Act and is considered the framework for union rights in Canada. It was adopted under the War Measures Act, and was extended to cover all workers in Canada through adoption by Acts of all the provincial legislatures. This continued to be in effect until 1948, where the provinces all passed similar legislation within their respective jurisdictions.

The regulations posed both positive and negative consequences for workers and unions alike. some of the former included:

  • Unions had guaranteed access to financial resources and support through the Rand formula, which required all workers under a union to pay union dues in exchange for a collective bargaining unit.
  • Union density increased dramatically following the end of WWII.
  • Unions were now legally recognized by federal law as a legal means of negotiating work terms and conditions with employers.
  • Workers won the right to share in gains of increased productivity via higher wages and benefits.
  • Promoted a virtuous cycle of production and consumption to produce economic growth based on Keynesian policies.
  • Created a grievance procedure that placed strict limits on management's ability to treat a worker in an arbitrary manner.

Among adverse consequences there were the following:

  • Grievance procedures shifted power away from unions and collective workers to lawyers and arbitrators.
  • Unions became extremely bureaucratic and less radical.
  • Workers agreed to Fordist/Taylorist working conditions and were expected to participate in increasing productivity.
  • Unions shifted focus away from mobilizing and educating their workforce about political affairs and began focusing on policing the workers and acting as a middle-man between workers and employers.
  • Union members became highly separated from the union representatives.
  • Attempts to create and maintain a distinctive working class culture were largely abandoned.
  • Wildcat and sympathy strikes were made illegal, and unionized workers had to follow an orderly fashion to engage in striking which meant no striking during periods of collective bargaining.

Famous quotes containing the words wartime, labour, relations and/or regulations:

    The man who gets drunk in peacetime is a coward. The man who gets drunk in wartime goes on being a coward.
    José Bergamín (1895–1983)

    The gates of Hell are open night and day;
    Smooth the descent, and easy is the way:
    But, to return, and view the cheerful skies;
    In this, the task and mighty labour lies.
    Virgil [Publius Vergilius Maro] (70–19 B.C.)

    When any one of our relations was found to be a person of a very bad character, a troublesome guest, or one we desired to get rid of, upon his leaving my house I ever took care to lend him a riding-coat, or a pair of boots, or sometimes a horse of small value, and I always had the satisfaction of finding he never came back to return them.
    Oliver Goldsmith (1728–1774)

    If the veil were withdrawn from the sanctuary of domestic life, and man could look upon the fear, the loathing, the detestations which his tyranny and reckless gratification of self has caused to take the place of confiding love, which placed a woman in his power, he would shudder at the hideous wrong of the present regulations of the domestic abode.
    Lydia Jane Pierson, U.S. women’s rights activist and corresponding editor of The Woman’s Advocate. The Woman’s Advocate, represented in The Lily, pp. 117-8 (1855-1858 or 1860)