CUPE NS Convention (May 25-May 28, 2025) report
Erica Fischer, CUPE 3912 SMU VP-PT Faculty
After reading all the reports that have been submitted by the other delegates who attended this convention, I feel I don’t have more to add. However, since I’m required to submit a report for attending this event I will write about why I agree our participation at this convention was valuable and why it is important to keep sending as many delegates as possible and not just a few to these events.
A couple of reports mentioned that CUPE 3912 has not been traditionally represented at these conventions. That is not the case. The Local has regularly sent one or two delegates to provincial and national conventions for years except during COVID (from 2020 to 2022.) CUPE, I believe, only cancelled events in 2020, but our Local decided not to send delegates to any event in person in 2021 and 2022 because of the pandemic.) In 2023, CUPE 3912 started attending these conventions again when we sent several delegates to the CUPE NS Women’s convention in Truro. Later that year, three or four members (TAs from the Dalhousie bargaining unit) were invited to participate at a panel at the CUPE NS Convention in Sydney, NS to talk about their experience during the DAL strike the previous year. That same year, we sent what we considered a large delegation of 5 delegates to an out-of-province event: the CUPE National Convention in Quebec City. In 2024, since the CUPE NS Convention was held locally, we were also able to send 5 delegates again. As a delegate to these last two conventions (CUPE National 2023 and CUPE NS 2024) and from previous reports submitted by delegates who attended other conventions in previous years, I know that our delegates have participated actively at these events by speaking to resolutions, voting on constitutional amendments, resolutions and motions, and interacting and establishing relationships with members of other Locals as well as with our own delegates with whom we don’t normally interact in person or outside executive meetings.
What was different this time around was that we sent to this convention our largest delegation ever (12 delegates) well prepared and with a clear goal: supporting and canvassing for Christine Saulnier, one of our members, to be elected to the highest position at the provincial level: President of CUPE NS. In order to be successful, we did a lot of preparation beforehand, especially Christine who started contacting other Locals and attending their meetings to gain their support and get their endorsement a couple of months before the convention. In April and May, a couple of these Locals joined us at some of the meetings we held in preparation for the convention. These preparation meetings were something new for our Local and I think we should continue having them so delegates know what is expected of them at these events.
The coalition building that Christine started in March didn’t stop after she received the endorsements of some Locals for her campaign. As it had been mentioned in other reports, during convention all of us continue fostering relationships with other Locals and with those who had already endorsed Christine. All this work before and during convention paid off in building our presence and getting some of us elected to committees and Lauren as an alternate for a regional VP position. In order to keep the momentum our Local has gained and to be able to organize our sector and be included as a sector at the next CUPE NS convention, it is important that we continue growing and strengthening our relationship with these and other Locals regularly and not just in preparation for a convention.
For this convention, we also submitted two resolutions for which our delegates were asked in advance to be prepared to speak to (in the past I think we have just endorsed resolutions the post-secondary national sector or other Locals have submitted and asked for our support.) One of the resolutions we submitted this time was specific to our Local and the other one was to support Justice for Workers, which would ultimately support all kinds of workers. Several of our delegates spoke in favour of these resolutions and of others submitted by other Locals especially those coming from education workers. However, speaking to our own resolution about our sector was an excellent opportunity to make all the attending delegates aware of the precariousness of the working conditions in post-secondary education and more specifically of the issues and precarity members in Local 3912 are facing. More importantly, all of CUPE 3912 delegates who spoke to any of these and other resolutions on the convention floor shared their personal experiences in their workplaces, so everyone attending (delegates, staff, guests, national and provincial officers) heard them. These stories had been shared during one-on-one conversations at this and in past conventions, but now having several delegates stand up and go to the mics to broadcast these stories is what I believe really made our Local visible and present in the mind of the rest of the attendees.
Our large number of delegates was also very visible because on the first day all of us were wearing pink CUPE 3912 t-shirts, as well as buttons supporting Christine, and we all sat together as a bloc. The rest of the days we all continued sitting together, wearing our buttons, and several of us continued wearing CUPE 3912 t-shirts. In the past, some of us had worn these t-shirts, but we haven’t sat as a bloc because it’s not easy finding several places available for more than 2 people to sit together at these events. This time, however, instead of sitting wherever we could find a free spot (there didn’t seem to be enough for all of us), we requested tables and chairs for the whole group to sit together.
It also gave the Local great visibility the fact that Lauren, our Local’s president, was asked to introduce the National President Mark Hancock as one of the speakers at the convention, and that Samantha Williams, the CUPE 3912 VP for SMU TAs, was awarded the Sean Foley CUPE NS Health and Safety Award. Our Local had nominated Sam for her contributions in fighting for accessibility and safety for all SMU TAs, and the full letter that was submitted as part of her nomination was read on the convention floor by the members of the CUPE NS Health and Safety committee. This was a big surprise that none of us was expecting. Since Sam was not in attendance, Aiden, who was one of the members who nominated her, went to the podium wearing his bright pink CUPE 3912 t-shirt to receive the award on Sam’s behalf and say a few words.
For all this (and much more), I believe our participation at this event was very successful. We achieved many things we were not even considering we could achieve that started by engaging and mobilizing our own members to attend this convention. The vast majority of the delegates our Local sent had never been to a CUPE Convention (75% to be exact.) I’m happy to have been part of this delegation. It was a great learning experience for everyone, including those of us who had attended other conventions.