Injunctions in Labour Disputes
A Symbol of Dissent and Unity
researched and written by Donna Sacuta
Before British Columbia had modern labour laws, government and the courts frequently used their powers to keep unions under their thumbs, and out of their workplaces.
One of their favourite tactics was the use of court injunctions. A steady stream of union leaders were sent to jail for defying court orders, especially in the 1960s.
Writing in “On the Line: A History of the British Columbia Labour Movement”, author Rod Mickleburgh explains:
For two years, the ILWU had tried unsuccessfully to get maritime employers to recognize statutory holidays in the Canada Labour Code. In a bid to bring the issue to a head, the union advised members to ignore a call to work on Good Friday. They did. This sent the employers to court. There, they obtained an injunction prohibiting the union from calling for a similar work stoppage on the next holiday. Union officers paid no attention to the order, and on Victoria Day the waterfront fell silent once again. A few days later, Canadian area president Roy Smith and nine local presidents were cited for contempt of court. In a ringing courtroom defence, Smith justified defiance of the court’s order. “We cannot and we will not allow ourselves to be bullied by the employers into doing something which will take away the rights of the membership,” he declared. Unmoved, the court fined Smith $500 and the others $400 each, with the option of three months in jail. All chose prison. “To pay our fines would be an encouragement to the employers’ tactics of seeking injunctions and fines as means of harassing our union and draining its financial resources,” the group said in a collective statement.
There was widespread support for the ILWU presidents who stood up to the courts. That included from inside the jail.
“Saturday morning they took us to Oakalla, which is the provincial prison. The change room and the laundry are one huge, huge room. They drive the van right in and take the prisoners out of the van and inside. Across one wall, there was a big banner that said Oakalla Laundry Workers Local 1 welcomes ILWU,” laughed Les Copan almost 50 years later 1.
The artwork, by an artist whose name is unknown, is proudly displayed in the ILWU dispatch hall in Chemainus, B.C.
In October 1973, BC’s first NDP government passed a modern labour code, creating a powerful Labour Relations Board that put an end to court injunctions in labour disputes.
- Les Copan, Pacific Coast Pensioners Association Oral History Project, Oral History Video, Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections[↩]