There's a local that might help to develop a left counter to the right
"moral" propaganda.

CB

^^^^^^



Only in Canada. Pity"



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Globeandmail.com <javascript:void(0);>
Solidarity forever and ever, amen



By MICHAEL VALPY


UPDATED AT 12:09 PM EST         Thursday, Nov 4, 2004


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TORONTO -- They work for God, but they say their workplace conditions are
too often wretched, and so a group of United Church clergy in Ontario and
B.C. have taken the first steps toward unionizing the 4,000 pastors in
Canada's largest Protestant denomination.

Citing psychological and physical abuse, bad working conditions, sweatshop
wages and a corporate church that responds to their problems inadequately, a
group of 30 clergy in Ontario and a similar number on the West Coast have
invited unions to step in and organize the church.

Physical abuse has become such a problem for clergy that in England, the
giant Manufacturing, Science and Finance Union, which represents 1,500
Anglican priests and a few rabbis, has made available tae kwon do martial
arts defence courses rather than insisting its members turn the other cheek.

"People are sometimes angry at God or religion or at life, and the
clergyperson represents that," said Rev. David Galston, pastor of Eternal
Spring United Church in Hamilton, Ont., and one of the leaders of the
unionization movement.

In Ontario, the clergy approached the Canadian Auto Workers and were greeted
with open arms. Mike Shields, the CAW's national director of organizing,
said: "I didn't have any hesitation when it was brought to my attention.
They're where we're at" on social justice issues.

At CAW headquarters, though, after the first frisson of excitement at the
prospect of organizing a church, the idea sunk in that the CAW and the
United Church's national administration are so close it could be awkward at
the negotiating table.

The issue does not appear to upset the church, which learned for the first
time yesterday details of the move to organize its clergy.

The United Church national general secretary, Rev. Jim Sinclair, said after
citing past joint endeavours by the church and CAW: "Our relationship with
the union movement is not something that's been a negative one, and I don't
see why it couldn't be a positive one, if in fact this moved further along."

Or as another senior official at national headquarters put it: "We're nice
people."

The Ontario ministers, who began their unionization planning three weeks
ago, will meet tomorrow with a CAW legal team to determine first of all if
the union thinks they qualify as workers under the province's labour law.
It's a grey area that has never been legally defined: whether they are
employees or officers of the church.

Whatever they are, they have dark stories to tell.

Vision TV's flagship public affairs program 360 Vision, which first got wind
of the unionization effort, broadcast a documentary last night in which the
wife of one clergyman described how her husband was driven from his United
Church ministry in Southern Ontario when a parishioner allegedly launched a
smear campaign against him.

Hamilton's Rev. Galston, former principal of the United Church's Iona
College at University of Windsor, said the church's own statistics show that
at any given time 18 per cent of its clergy are on stress leave. In fact,
the church says that 60 per cent have reported some conflict with their
congregations.

Rev. Galston recalled coming into his office when he was pastor at another
church and finding a member of the congregation going through his personal
files. When he asked what the man was doing, he was told it was none of his
business.

He said it's common for members of the congregation just to walk into the
minister's residence -- the manse -- as if they owned the building. He
described one clergyman walking out of his shower to find someone there.
"There could be 20 keys to the door floating around," he said. "You don't
know who has them."

Rev. Galston said the annual income for a minister after 12 years' service
is $38,000, plus housing. It should be $10,000 to $15,000 higher, he said.

The church's general secretary, Rev. Sinclair, said a national commission
has now completed the first year of a three-year compensation study. Rev.
Joe Ramsay, the national church's specialist on clergy stress issues, said
the church is well aware of the endemic nature of the problem and is
searching for remedies.



Paul P

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