http://sharenews.com/an-open-letter-to-ontario-premier-kathleen-wynne-action-speaks-louder-than-words/
Dear Premier Wynne:
The Network for Pan-Afrikan Solidarity (NPAS) agrees with your
assertion quoted in Share newspaper from your speech at the Liberal
Caucus’ Afrikan Liberation Month (aka Black History Month) annual event:
“I want Ontario to be a place where everyone has the same opportunities
and I want people to have the support they need. That’s what equity
means. It means we have to create the conditions that will allow
everybody to have that level playing field. Where it’s not level, we
need to raise the floor up a bit.”
Premier Wynne, it is our position that action speaks louder than
words when it comes to addressing issues of social oppression. If it is
your intention to tackle systemic forms of oppression such as White
supremacy (racism), patriarchy and/or class exploitation, it will have
to be by way of relevant legislation and the accompanying transformative
policies and programs.
NPAS is putting forward five propositions that would give concrete
form to your claim that “government exists to make people’s lives
better, to support people in realizing their dreams and to create the
conditions for people to be great and to be able to achieve.”
Firstly, your government needs to draft and present an employment
equity bill before the legislature to undermine the systemic racist,
sexist and ableist employment barriers that oppress Afrikans, other
racialized peoples, and indigenous peoples in the workplaces of this
province.
We need a provincial employment equity law that supersedes that
passed by the Ontario New Democrats in 1994 as well as the current
Employment Equity Act of the federal government on the establishment of
strong accountability measures, strict timelines, and measurable
targets. In spite of an employment equity law governing the federal
public sector, racialized workers are the only protected group that is
under-represented in the core civil service.
Secondly, if the Ontario Liberals would like to “raise the floor up a
bit” for Afrikans and other racialized peoples, we are demanding an
increase in the minimum wage from $10.25 per hour to $15.00 per hour.
Many racialized people are forced to seek employment in the secondary
labour market with its low wage rates, minimal or no benefits, and
limited or non-existent promotional prospects that feed into the
soul-crushing racialization and feminization of poverty with which many
of us must contend.
Thirdly, you should work to change the provincial labour law to make
it easier for racialized workers and other members of the working class
to form or join a union. By instituting automatic certification of a
union where a majority of the relevant workers in a workplace have
signed a union card would be a clear indication that your government
cares about Ontario’s working class majority.
Tied to this, the Ontario Liberals need to significantly increase the
fines imposed on employers for breaking the law that protects the
workers’ right to freely join or form a union. The current low fines
provide an incentive for employers to contravene and view that illegal
action as the cost of doing business.
How is unionization linked to the fight against White supremacy (and
sexism) in the labour market? According to Canadian Labour Congress’s
economist Andrew Jackson in the research paper Is Work Working for
Workers of Colour?, “workers of colour who were unionized earned an
average of $33,525 in 1999. This was 29.9% or $7,724 more in 1999 than
workers of colour who were not unionized.” Racialized workers are
under-represented in workplaces covered by collective agreements.
Fourthly, the rates of incarceration of Afrikan and Indigenous people
in this province are astronomically and oppressively high. In a March
2, 2013 expose on the subject of mass incarceration of Afrikan men, the
Toronto Star states “Young black men face racism, poverty, lack of
opportunity, social isolation, violence in their neighbourhoods, family
challenges and unemployment.”
Your government needs to address the race, gender and class
oppression that fuels the disproportionate jailing of Afrikan men and
women. Tackling the systemic problem of over-policing of Afrikan peoples
is absolutely necessary. Your governments should also increase
educational opportunities by providing affordable, accessible and
quality education for all. Free post-secondary education would be a
significant anti-racist contribution that you could make to the cause of
social justice in Ontario.
Lastly, the Toronto police’s racial profiling and containment of the
Afrikan community through the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention
Strategy (TAVIS) and the use of the “208 card” demand your intervention
as an equity advocate. Afrikan people are stopped, questioned and carded
at excessively higher rates in all of the 72 policing districts in
Toronto than their White counterparts. However, in the predominantly
White areas of Toronto, Afrikans are racially profiled and carded at
levels way above those obtained in highly racialized areas of the city.
Our people should not be subjected to over-policing, apartheid policing
and the trampling of our rights.
We look forward to concrete steps from you and the Ontario Liberals in advancing an actively anti-racist agenda.
Sincerely,
Dr. Ajamu Nangwaya, Membership Development Coordinator
Network for Pan-Afrikan Solidarity
I like the demands but just like a lot of people I'd be very surprised if the Liberals act on these ideas. The Liberals are clearly in government primarily for the elite capitalist class, hence why they've embraced austerity and tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. I think Africans and working class Canadians should work instead to replace the liberals with a real people's government composed of progressive, socialist an communist mpps. Then we can have a peoples recovery and government not representing the selfish interests of the capitalist class.
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