17 May, 2010Global Trade Union Sustainability Conference in Toronto fast approaching.
CANADA: Next month, the International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions (ICEM) and the IMF will conduct a pivotal forum for industrial and manufacturing unions on sustainable development. On June 18-19, 2010, the two Global Union Federations - along with their Canadian affiliates - will host a conference titled "The Triple Crisis of Sustainability" in Toronto, Ontario, to precede the G8 and G20 summit meetings near there.
There is little question that the economic collapse, environmental degradation, and the resulting negative social impacts have badly affected workers, their families, and their communities. Contributing to the magnitude of these crises is the absence of effective global regulations and lagging financial governance of markets.
Toronto's World Conference on Sustainability will produce a declaration that will be forwarded to the G8 and G20 summits. It will demand that global economic and political leaders take decisive action to reverse the downward social spiral felt by most of the world's people, and begin implementing real, worker-friendly solutions on climate change and a sustainable economic future.
The Conference will include panel discussions, as well as keynote speeches from notable experts on the economic crisis, sustainability, and global governance. In addition, there will be ample opportunities for trade union leaders of ICEM and IMF affiliates, as well as others to tell their own stories of how workers have responded to a crisis not of their own making.
The Conference will be held in the Dominion Ballroom of the Sheraton Centre Hotel, Toronto, 123 Queen Street West. The ICEM has reserved a block of rooms. The registration form for the Conference and hotel rooms can be found here, and it should be returned forthwith to [email protected] in order to assure prompt booking.
Workers have a central role to play in building a future that lifts people out of poverty, while protecting the environment. The ICEM and IMF believe that the systematic looting of the global economy by unscrupulous speculators must be stopped. The Jobs Pact, developed by the ILO, is one proposal for exiting a financial crisis brought about by greed and lack of financial oversight.
Regarding the environment, industrial unions did deliver a message in Copenhagen that a fair, ambitious, and legally binding agreement on global greenhouse gas emissions is necessary, but that the legitimate concerns of workers for decent work, social justice, and long-term, sustainable jobs must be forefront. It cannot be jobs or the environment, it must be both, or it will ultimately be neither.
The crises of failing economies, environmental inaction, and social disorder are interconnected. It will be the goal of the ICEM/IMF conference to ensure that the voices of workers are heard on these matters at the highest level. Jobs, workers' rights, social protections, quality public services, and sustainability are at the heart of this agenda.