I went undercover in a Toronto factory where temp workers have died. Here's
what I found 


Sara Mojtehedzadeh and Brendan Kennedy - Toronto Star5 hrs ago

 



© Sara Mojtehedzadeh I went undercover in a Toronto factory where temp
workers have died. Here's what I found 

There are two dozen of us crowded around a conveyor belt, bodies twisting to
snatch dough off the line. The floor is strewn with raw pastries that seem
to accumulate faster than anyone can sweep them up. They collect in bloated
masses at our feet.

It is my first day as a temp at Fiera Foods, an industrial bakery that reeks
of yeast and is alive with the constant drone of machinery.

We are forming and packing raw, circular pastry dough into wet plastic trays
— a shoulder-crunching task called pinching. These may well be the
croissants you eat for breakfast.

Supervisors shout at us to wake up. They shout at us to move faster, pinch
nicer, work harder. No one talks through the noise and exhaustion.

The factory relies heavily on temporary help agency workers. Its health and
safety record is checkered; three temps have died here or at Fiera’s
affiliated companies since 1999.

Across the province, more and more people are relying on temp agencies to
find work. When they do, statistics show they are more likely to get hurt on
the job.

I am undercover to investigate why.

Fiera’s current clients include some of the continent’s biggest brands
including Dunkin’ Donuts and Sobeys; over the years it has made pastries for
Costco, Tim Hortons, Metro, Walmart, and Loblaw. Its factories churn out
baked goods by the truckload, destined for markets across North America and
around the world. They can produce 2 million bagels alone per day.

Fiera said health and safety is a “core principle,” in response to questions
from the Star. It said it contributes to Ontario’s “economic well-being”
with more than 1,200 people working at its facilities in the GTA, and that
it believes strongly in helping immigrants “find work and build their
futures in Canada.” It also said it uses strict criteria when choosing temp
agencies to work with. The company says it has given almost $1.5 million to
health-care initiatives and minority communities over the past decade.

It has also received some $4.7 million in government loans and grants to
expand capacity and create good jobs. The company says all employees are
given “in-depth training” and that Fiera has invested half a million dollars
in health and safety initiatives over the past two years.

I get about five minutes of training in a factory packed with industrial
equipment.

I am paid in cash with no deductions or pay stubs. I pick up my wages from a
payday lender, a 35-minute bus ride from the factory.

Fiera has been slapped with 191 orders for health and safety violations over
the past two decades, for everything from lack of proper guarding on
machines to unsafely stored gas cylinders.

At least a dozen of the women I meet on my assembly line at Fiera, a
multimillion-dollar company, are hired through temp agencies.

Temp agency workers are changing the face of labour in Ontario.

In workplaces around the province, the use of temp agencies limits
companies’ liability for accidents on the job, reduces their responsibility
for employees’ rights, and cuts costs.

When I walk into the factory, I see mostly people of colour. Many are new
Canadians. Many told me they have taken this job for one reason: to survive.

In August, charges were laid against Fiera Foods under the Occupational
Health and Safety Act for the 2016 death of a temp agency worker named Amina
Diaby.
<http://www.metronews.ca/news/toronto/2017/09/10/one-year-temp-agency-worker
-died-fiera-foods-family-answers.html>  Her hijab was caught in a machine,
strangling her.

She was 23 years old. She was a refugee trying to save for nursing school.
She had been on the job two weeks.

The hiring

Fiera Foods’ Marmora St. factory in North York sits beside a highway and
behind a Bingo hall, a sprawling presence on a small cul-de-sac dotted with
storefront churches and auto-repair shops.

A white placard adorns the factory’s main entrance. It directs workers with
“temporary employment” inquiries inside.

Fiera Foods is a private company founded by Boris Serebryany and Alex Garber
in 1987, after the two men emigrated from the former Soviet Union. Fiera has
another factory on Norelco Dr., about 15 minutes away from the Marmora St.
plant. Boris and Alex are also the administrators of Tristar Bakers and
Bakery Deluxe Co., located on Norfinch Dr.

Adjacent to Fiera’s Marmora St. plant is Marmora Freezing Corp., whose
administrators are Anna Garber and Boris’s daughter Carmela
Serebryany-Harris. Carmela is also one of the administrators of CMS Ontario,
along with Susin Svetlana Garber. David Gelbloom is the administrator of
Upper Crust.

Fiera describes these five companies as its “alliance partners.”

The company markets its “innovation, quality, and cost containment,”
according to its website. It maintains the highest possible rating with the
British Retail Consortium’s food safety certification program and has
enjoyed a “double-digit growth rate for 18 consecutive years.”

Serebryany and Garber declined to be interview for this story, but in a
written response to questions from the Star, Fiera said its “diversity would
not be possible without our ongoing relationships with temporary help
agencies,” which provide workers with food safety and chemical safety
training, according to the company. Temp agencies also help Fiera meet
fluctuating demand, it said.

Fiera is far from alone in its reliance on agencies. Over the past decade,
the number of temp agency offices opening across Ontario has increased by 20
per cent, with some 1,700 operating in the GTA alone, statistics obtained by
the Star show.

Agencies make their money by placing workers at companies at an agreed-upon
rate, billing the client for temps’ wages, plus a markup for themselves.
Proponents say temp agencies help businesses stay competitive by providing
them with a “flexible” workforce, while also creating job opportunities for
people who may not otherwise get them.

Temp agency employees are some of the most “vulnerable and precariously
employed of all workers,” a 420-page report recently compiled by two
independent experts for the Ontario government says.

Temps can be terminated at a moment’s notice, the report notes. Companies
who use them are liable along with their temp agency for unpaid wages,
including overtime and vacation pay, but not for most other workplace
rights. Temps are often paid less than permanent counterparts doing the same
job, and sometimes work for long periods of time in supposedly “temporary”
positions. Agencies are not required to disclose the markups they charge on
workers’ wages. New provincial legislation, which goes to second reading
this month, seeks to tackle some of those issues.

Research conducted for the Toronto-based Institute for Work and Health also
suggests that companies contract out risky work to temps. When a temp gets
hurt, the company is not fully responsible because the temp agency assumes
liability at the worker’s compensation board — saving their clients money on
insurance premiums. This is a crucial financial incentive to use them.

When I approached a security guard at Fiera asking about shifts, he tells me
the plant doesn’t hire directly. He scribbles down the number for a
temporary help agency called Magnus Services.

I can’t apply as a journalist who has written extensively about temp
agencies, so I give Magnus my grandmother’s last name and put myself on a
waitlist for work. The agency asks me if I have safety shoes and about my
immigration status. They do not ask if I have any experience working in a
factory around machinery.

For two weeks, I hear nothing. Then, on a Monday afternoon, the agency
calls: there is work available the next day. The pay is $11.50 an hour,
cash, 10 cents above minimum wage. I am told to bring safety shoes, and
instructed not to wear a hijab or jewelry.

I receive an email that includes a map to the factory and a one-page generic
summary of
<https://misc.thestar.com/interactivegraphic/2017/09-sep/08-temp/GOOD%20MANU
FACTURING%20PRACTICES-2.pdf> “Good Manufacturing Practices” such as washing
your hands and alerting your supervisor if you see any insects or rodents.
All I need to do is reply with a copy of photo ID and a social insurance
number.

I will never meet anyone from the temp agency in person.

As I will find out later, their offices do not even exist.

First day

I squeeze onto a bench with other new temps in Fiera’s crowded break room.
It’s 2 p.m., and we will be here until 10:30 p.m. At the front of the room,
a clock says THINK SAFETY in red letters across its dial.

Worker safety is the bakery’s “highest concern,” according to an initial
email from company spokesperson Ziggy Romick. This includes hands-on
instruction for workers, weekly meetings with supervisors about health and
safety, bulletin boards with information about safety policies and the
factory’s Joint Health and Safety Committee, and annual fire drills.

Responding to a series of follow-up questions from the Star, David Gelbloom
— who in addition to his role as administrator of Upper Crust, is Fiera’s
general counsel and HR manager — says my supervisor provided a health and
safety orientation and told me the location of the fire exits.

“He remembers you specifically,” Gelbloom said. “He tells us that at no time
did he sense you did not understand what you were being told … nor did you
indicate to him that you were having any difficulty understanding his
instructions or that you were dissatisfied with your orientation.”

In fact, I was trained by a woman.

She gives me a lab coat and hairnet, which is fastidiously monitored
throughout my time at the plant. She asks if I have safety shoes on and
rattles off a list of instructions, telling me not to wear nail polish, fake
nails or fake eyelashes.

She tells me I have the right to refuse unsafe work. If nothing I feel is
safe is available, she says I can go home and wait for the temp agency to
call again. (According to the Ministry of Labour, employees who refuse
unsafe work are supposed to stay close to the worksite until the issue is
resolved or an inspector arrives. It is illegal to suspend or dismiss
someone for a work refusal.)

No one tells me where fire extinguishers or exits are. Another temp confides
she didn’t buy safety shoes, which cost the equivalent of a day’s wages. She
makes it through the screening anyway.

There is no hands-on instruction. I am shown a diagram of a machine and told
not to put my hand in moving parts.

>From start to finish, the process takes about five minutes.

The pace on the production line is crushing. Men feed dough into machines
running alongside us, which spit out partially-formed pastries. Half of the
women on the line pinch the ends together to form circles. The rest of us
scoop up as many clumps of dough as we can between our fingers, packing them
as quickly as possible into plastic trays. We need to ensure they are placed
the right way, or they deform in the oven and are wasted.

Work that is too slow elicits shouting. Work that is too sloppy elicits more
shouting. Our lead hand fires out a salvo of shrill commands to push the
tempo.

The pinching continues for seven hours and 15 minutes. We receive one
half-hour lunch break, as required by law. It is unpaid. We also receive a
paid 15-minute break.

I feel overwhelming relief when it’s finally my turn for lunch. My shoulders
are on fire. I shuffle to the break room and look eagerly at the THINK
SAFETY clock. Only three hours have passed. A co-worker watches me collapse
onto a bench.

“It gets harder,” she calls out.

The flimsy, plastic trays chafe our hands raw. We need to ask permission to
use the bathroom, where the back of the toilet is covered by a black crust.
We do not wear gloves or face masks, which Fiera says are not mandatory.

Gelbloom says workers wash their hands before entering production areas and
that employees are relied upon to “help us maintain our high standards.”

“Food safety is paramount at Fiera Foods, and Fiera adheres to stringent
food safety policies,” he said.

A woman on the line deftly fixes my clumsy mistakes; I keep packing pastries
wrong side up. She has been at the factory several months, also through a
temp agency.

“Do you like it here?” I ask her.

“Nobody likes this job,” she says in hesitant English. “But the money.”

Over the course of my month at the plant, I earn $1,552 – which falls below
Ontario’s poverty line for a single adult. (The Star donated its earnings to
North York Harvest Food Bank.)

Looking at the temp industry as a whole, agency workers are at greater risk
of injury and are more likely to be exposed to dangerous working conditions
than permanent employees, according to research from the United States,
Germany, the Netherlands and other countries.

Statistics Canada stopped collecting data on temp agency workers a decade
ago, making it difficult to paint a picture of the workforce here. To fill
that gap, the Star filed multiple Freedom of Information requests with the
Workplace Safety and Insurance Board and obtained custom data from the
Association of Workers Compensation Boards of Canada (AWCBC).

While temp agencies are traditionally associated with casual office work,
statistics from the WSIB show the majority of temps are now being placed in
other sectors — including non-clerical, construction, restaurant and driving
jobs.

The Star also asked the WSIB for injury data filed by non-clerical temp
agencies — those operating in sectors like manufacturing, warehousing, and
health care — and comparable workplaces. The statistics showed non-clerical
temps were more than twice as likely to get hurt on the job in 2016 as
non-temp counterparts.

In fact, the injury rate for temps in non-clerical workplaces has
consistently been close to double that of other comparable sectors for the
past 10 years. However, since 2010, temp agency workers spent fewer days off
work as a result of their injuries, according to the compensation board’s
figures.

The AWCBC data showed that while temp agencies operating in non-clerical
sectors and construction represent less than 2 per cent of the workforce,
they ranked in the top 10 for absolute highest number of reported injuries
over the past decade. That’s compared to more than a thousand industries
across the province.

Generally, non-clerical temps and temps working in construction reported
suffering blunt-force injuries like being struck by an object or “caught in
or compressed” by equipment, according to the AWCBC. More than 40 per cent
of those claiming injuries were under 30.

Because of the lack of Statistics Canada data, it is hard to calculate the
true number of temp agency workers in Ontario. The WSIB quantifies the
number of “full-time equivalent” employees, which has crept up steadily
since 2008, and now sits at around 120,000.

But that figure does not reflect the actual number of people who cycle
through temp agencies. Overall in Ontario, temporary jobs — which include
but are not limited to temp agency jobs — have grown at more than four times
the rate of permanent jobs since the 2008 recession, according to Statistics
Canada. In food manufacturing work, temp jobs have skyrocketed by 110 per
cent in Toronto in the past 10 years. Permanent ones have increased by less
than 3 per cent.

Temp agency workers are often untrained. In the U.S., where more research
has been done on temp work, David Michaels, former director of the
Occupational Health and Safety Administration, noted in 2014 that “most
employers don’t treat temporary workers the way they treat their permanent
employees — they don’t provide them with the training that is necessary.”

Even when they get hurt, many temp workers don’t file compensation claims
because they are afraid of losing their job.

“(Temp agency workers) can easily be told, following an injury, that ‘you’re
not covered by workers’ comp’ or ‘we have no more work for you,’” says Ellen
MacEachen, a professor at the University of Waterloo and affiliate of the
Toronto-based Institute for Work & Health.

Claims suppression was identified as an issue across all sectors in a 2013
study for the WSIB. It found that of 100 enforcement files analyzed, 48
contained indications of employers directly trying to block or dissuade
workers from filing an injury claim.

MacEachen says the problem is particularly acute for temps, who can be let
go for no reason.

“Even if they are aware of their rights, they won’t risk their work by
speaking up.”

On the job

Boris Serebryany’s elegant Forest Hill mansion is a testament to Fiera’s
success. On my way into the factory, I sometimes pass his Bentley parked
outside.

The company says Fiera’s story is “the story of immigrants” and that it
maintains a “commitment to being a starting point for newcomers to Canada.”

With the exception of some mechanics who appear to be Russian and some
supervisors, the overwhelming majority of workers I see are people of
colour, with home countries across Africa, the Middle East, and the
Caribbean.

“Most of them, it’s their first job in the country,” a former employee later
tells me. “You just get locked into it. People don’t know there’s better.”

The factory floor I’m working on is cluttered with industrial equipment,
boxes, metal racks; the floors are extremely slippery. My co-worker warns me
about them too.

“Don’t kill yourself for an $11-an-hour job,” she says. (I am actually paid
$11.50, while some temps hired through other agencies are paid $11.40.)

Our production line is so crowded that we are constantly elbowing each other
and I have to squeeze by tall dough racks to get to my side of the conveyor
belt. One woman places a plastic tray over a turning gear at the back of a
fan; she is worried her clothing will get caught.

Our floor supervisor comes around a couple of times a shift and vigilantly
ensures hijabs or baggy sweaters are tucked in, warning us they are a
hazard. (My temp agency told me not to wear a hijab, but some women do.) We
never have the “weekly meeting” Fiera says is common practice.

At one point, a new conveyor belt is installed. Across from me, the
emergency stop button cannot be reached without climbing under another
conveyor belt. Fiera’s lawyer Gelbloom said the company “audits its work
areas constantly to ensure that we have both emergency stop buttons and pull
cords.”

There is no additional training when I volunteer one day to work on the
“hard” floor, where a co-worker tells me women are sometimes sent as
punishment for talking too much. The pace is even more frenetic here. The
gloopy cherry turnovers will clog the machine, so we frantically contort our
bodies to grab all of them before they reach the end of the assembly line.
Watching me flail, a co-worker — a refugee from East Africa — touches my
arm.

“Be calm,” she says. “I am helping you.”

I am so consumed by wrangling the pastries that I don’t notice the forklifts
whizzing by immediately beside me until I am startled by a loud horn. A
metal guard rail covers part of the line but not where I’m standing. I make
a mental note not to step to my right.

Three temp agency workers have died at Fiera or its affiliated companies. In
1999, a 17-year old temp named Ivan Golyashov was killed at Fiera’s Norelco
Dr. plant when a dough mixer was activated while he was inside cleaning it.
In 2011, 69-year-old Aydin Kazimov was crushed by a transport truck outside
Marmora Freezing Corp. Fiera Foods and Marmora were convicted in each case
under the Occupational Health and Safety Act and fined $150,000 on each
occasion.

In August, the Ministry of Labour also laid charges against Fiera for the
death of Amina Diaby, who was killed after just two weeks on the job. A
police investigation into the case is ongoing.

Gelbloom acknowledged that Fiera had been issued with numerous health and
safety orders from the ministry, but said it has always worked to
immediately resolve them, and took “adequate measures” to protect Diaby. He
said Fiera remains “saddened” by the deaths that have occurred “at or near”
its facilities.

“We believe that the health and safety of our workforce is our highest
concern and we continue to strive for improvements,” he said.

In 2013, Fiera received a $3.2 million federal business loan. The following
year, Fiera was awarded a $1.5 million grant from the provincial Ministry of
Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs to expand capacity. At the time, the
company was lauded by Premier Kathleen Wynne for providing “good jobs” to
Torontonians.

Fiera donated $2,500 to the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario in
2007 and has donated $25,000 to the Liberal Party of Ontario since 2010,
electoral finance disclosures show. In 2016, the company was included in a
provincial trade mission to India.

The trip came just two months after Diaby died.

No one I speak to at the factory knows Diaby’s name. But there are still
whispers of the accident that killed her. Once, at the start of one of my
shifts, a group of us huddle under the neon-purple glow of a pest-control
lamp to wash our hands.

“Just make sure you don’t hurt yourselves,” a male colleague calls out in
passing.

“They’ll send you home and bring in a new one.”

Workers’ compensation insurance premiums are calculated in part by injury
rates, and by extension are meant to reflect workplace health and safety.

Despite the orders issued by the Ministry of Labour against Fiera Foods, it
remains a model employer in the eyes of the WSIB. At a facility where there
are hundreds of people working around the clock, there was just one
lost-time injury claim registered in 2016.

The company has received multiple rebates from the WSIB for their low-injury
claims rate over the past decade. This year, the compensation board did not
issue it a rebate because of Diaby’s death. Its investigation found the
company “did not take sufficient precautions to prevent the incident.”

But non-fatal injuries to temp agency employees — if they are even claimed —
wouldn’t impact Fiera’s insurance premiums.

At the WSIB, the temp agency is considered the worker’s employer. If they
are hurt on the job, the agency takes the financial hit, not the place where
they were actually injured.

As a result, the compensation system “doesn’t really reflect the safety in
the workplace,” says the University of Waterloo’s MacEachen. “It doesn’t
hold (companies) responsible properly.”

The Star spoke to three former employees of Fiera Foods who asked not to be
named for fear of reprisal. They said workers were discouraged from
reporting injuries to the WSIB. In some cases they said workers were told
they could stay home and still be paid, as long as they didn’t file claims.

“This is an invisible workforce,” Deena Ladd of the Toronto-based Workers’
Action Centre says of temps. “That starts to provide a legitimization of
lesser standards and lesser treatment.”

The repeated safety violations found by Ministry of Labour inspectors also
don’t affect Fiera’s premiums.

“Nobody is held responsible. Nobody is held accountable,” adds Chris Buckley
of the Ontario Federation of Labour. “They’ve built a successful business on
the backs of workers.”

Pay day

Even though I am at the factory full-time, I am legally an employee of
Magnus Services. But I never meet anyone from the temp agency, and I am not
even paid by them.

The agency is owned by Aleksandr Ostrovsky, who lives in a sleek mansion in
Richmond Hill. There are two business addresses associated with Magnus; one
is a virtual office in a North York office building. The other is an empty
unit in a strip mall.

In the initial email I receive from Magnus, it says to pick up my cash
somewhere called “GTA Employment,” an address on Steeles Ave. W.

On top of working at the factory, many of my colleagues are taking care of
children or going to school, already making long commutes by public transit
to get to the area. As a result, some women have not had time to get their
pay for weeks. Once a colleague calls me, distraught. Her wallet was stolen
almost immediately after she picked up hundreds of dollars’ worth of wages.

When I show up at the Steeles Ave. address, I discover it is actually a
payday lender named Cashmania. There doesn’t appear to be any indication of
a GTA Employment office. I show my factory ID to the man behind a Plexiglas
window, who hands over a fistful of bills and coins. I ask for my pay stub,
but the man shrugs; he just delivers the cash, he says.

I call Magnus to ask the same question. A woman picks up.

 “We don’t provide pay stubs,” she tells me. “You get paid $11.50 cash per
hour. You don’t have any deductions.”

I call once more when I leave the factory, this time to ask for my record of
employment.

“We don’t do that,” says the woman who answers. “We don’t do records of
employment, no job letters, and no pay stubs.”

Ostrovsky, the director of Magnus Services, declined to be interviewed for
this story. His lawyer, Leo Klug, responded to some of the Star’s questions
in writing.

“Magnus is a responsible agency working with top tier corporations that are
regularly inspected by government officials and it takes pride in supplying
necessary labour and employing individuals who might not otherwise obtain
employment,” Klug wrote.

Klug said “long-term” employees at the agency are paid by cheque with
appropriate deductions, and are issued T4 slips and records of employment
upon request. Only “sporadic” workers are paid in cash by a payday lender,
he said, because “it is impossible to calculate proper deductions.”

Employees, no matter how sporadic their hours, are entitled to a pay stub
and a record of employment. Employers are legally required to make statutory
deductions. Under Ontario law, if an employee is paid in cash, they must be
paid at their worksite or somewhere “agreeable” to the worker.

Klug did not define how the company distinguishes “long-term” versus
“sporadic” employees, nor did he provide an explanation for why employees
are sent to Cashmania to pick up their wages.

After I describe my payment arrangements to Fiera, the company’s general
counsel Gelbloom said Fiera did not know Magnus was paying employees in cash
without deductions, remittances, or records of employment.

“As a result of your allegations, Fiera is currently in the process of
engaging a third party to audit Magnus and we will extend this process to
all temporary work agencies we contract with if we become aware of any
similar circumstances,” Gelbloom said.

When we confront Cashmania, a man who identifies himself only as “Kim,” says
he is in charge.

We later determine his full name to be Kim Baranov. In 2011, he was charged
by York Regional Police as part of an investigation into a $10-million
money-laundering and insurance fraud ring, allegedly involving forged
passports and staged car accidents. Baranov was accused of possessing a fake
passport. The charges against Baranov were later withdrawn in exchange for a
peace bond, according to court documents.

Ostrovsky, the owner of Magnus, has twice been charged with fraud-related
offences, but he has never been convicted. In 2007, he was charged with 10
counts of fraud over $5,000 in relation to an alleged insurance fraud
involving forged cheques. The charges were later withdrawn. The following
year he was charged with defrauding Wawanesa Mutual Insurance of less than
$5,000. The charges were later stayed at the Crown’s request.

Baranov says temp agencies use payday lenders to handle cash because
agencies don’t have the security to do it themselves. He says he provides
the same service to multiple agencies and that pay stubs and deductions
aren’t his problem.

“They pay us (a) little fee and we give them envelopes for people,” he said.
“That’s all I know.”

He has heard of Ostrovsky, Serebryany and Garber, but says he personally has
nothing to do with “big” guys like them. He just hands out money dropped off
in a van every week, he says.

Back at the factory, I chat with some of the women in the break room about
our wages. We try to calculate if we’ve been paid the right amount, and
wonder why the transaction was so bizarre.

“It’s weird,” says one. “I’m working here. Shouldn’t I just get paid here?”

Paying cash is not illegal if the appropriate deductions are made and pay
stubs are issued — but rigorous government enforcement is essential, says
Regini David of West Scarborough Community Legal Services.

That task is becoming harder.

The Star obtained the names and addresses of Ontario’s 2,588 temp agency
accounts registered at the WSIB. Using Google Earth, we looked up over 450
of them in the GTA.

More than a hundred appeared to be residential addresses, including suburban
homes or condo buildings. Around a dozen were simply a P.O. box or were
registered to a UPS mailbox service. We visited two addresses, including one
13 floors above the Star’s newsroom at One Yonge St., that were “virtual
offices” receiving mail for a dozen agencies. At least one listed address
was an empty plot of land.

David says that can be bad news for workers.

“When there’s unpaid wages, it’s really hard for them to get at (these temp
agencies). The phone numbers change, even the location changes. And even
when they are there, they are NOT there. Their office is not open,” says
David.

It also means that authorities lose their leverage when trying to enforce
the law, notes the University of Ottawa’s Katherine Lippel, who specializes
in health and safety legal issues and workers’ compensation.

For example, the WSIB can ultimately seize a factory if it fails to pay its
insurance premiums. But that doesn’t work when a temp agency’s only real
asset may be a cellphone.

“Because these organizations are in somebody’s basement, the usual tools to
provide incentives to respect the law don’t work so well,” says Lippel.

In an interview with the Star for this story, Minister of Labour Kevin Flynn
said he, too, is concerned about how the industry is evolving — and how to
hold bad actors accountable.

“As a ministry, we would be concerned that someone could pack up very
quickly, avoid any liabilities they have, and open up down the road the next
day.”

Who’s the boss?

Even after I wash my white lab coat, an insistent, yeasty smell clings to
it. A badge on the coat’s left breast has “Fiera Foods” emblazoned in purple
italics on it.

Workers here have been recruited by posters in north Toronto bus stations,
or referred to temp agencies by friends. Some are financing school, others
need an injection of cash.

But the most common reason I hear is simple: workers are here to survive.

At least, notes one woman I work with, you don’t have to wait by the phone
each morning hoping for a shift — unlike other temp agency gigs. Some have
been at Fiera regularly for months as “temps,” one for over a year.

The ladder to a permanent job, which would mean higher pay and benefits,
seems slippery. At one point, my floor supervisor tells me there are jobs
available for “people like me.” When I ask HR if there are any openings, I
am told there is “nothing specific” available. I don’t personally meet any
permanent employees except for my lead hand, although I’m told some of the
women who relieve us on breaks might also be permanent.

According to Fiera, temp agency employment gives workers the flexibility to
“accommodate family and other life obligations.”

We aren’t paid when we are sick. We aren’t told if we are working the
weekend until the last minute. One colleague tells me she is miserable on a
new production line; her supervisor will not let her go to the bathroom.

Although we start work at 2:30 p.m., many women arrive at least half an hour
early. Getting a good place on the line is important. We take lunch one by
one starting at around 4:30 p.m., which means the people who go earliest
then have to stand for almost the rest of the shift.

Working at Fiera is better than nothing, one woman tells me, but in her
country, factories are not like this.

“They like to drain you in this Canada,” she says.

Cameras are placed in hallways and break rooms, and trained on every
production line, which Fiera says is a safety measure. A co-worker warns me
not to be too chatty or take my phone out lest it be caught on video.

I take to sitting in a smaller break room, which some women prefer because
it is quieter and there are fewer men. There is a locker room here, which
permanent workers appear to use. The bathrooms are cleaner, even though all
the doors but one are broken. Temps don’t get lockers, so we keep our
valuables in our lab coat pockets and leave the rest of our things on open
bag racks.

When machines jam up and production halts, women rub each other’s shoulders
or crouch on the floor. A fistfight breaks out between the men because of a
dispute over dough racks. On another night, a shouting match erupts because
one man accuses another of not working hard enough.

 “F--- you,” the man yells back. “I’m breaking my body.”

A young temp worries for the older women on the line; the long hours are too
much, and people have family obligations. Then she shakes her head.

“People do desperate things,” she says, “when they have no choice.”

This month, new legislation aimed at protecting precarious workers will go
to second reading at Queen’s Park. Labour advocates have been fighting for
some of the proposed changes — including a higher minimum wage and paid sick
days for all workers — for years.

Bill 148’s measures include more resources for enforcement, and greater
protections for temp agency workers. If successful, it will make it easier
for them to unionize and prohibit companies from paying them less than
permanent counterparts doing the same work.

“I think probably the No. 1 thing that really comes out of it is the
protections that these folks will have and the incentive for using temporary
help workers in the first place,” Flynn, the labour minister, says. “I think
a lot of it will be gone.”

But some workers’ advocates say the bill does not go far enough on temp
agencies.

“There are so many loopholes that you could drive a bus through them,” says
Deena Ladd of the Workers’ Action Centre.

For one, Ladd says the equal pay for equal work language is too weak. The
bill only mandates equal pay for “substantially” similar work, which Ladd
says could allow companies to fudge job descriptions to preserve pay
imbalances between temporary and permanent employees.

In the case of my production line at Fiera, the changes wouldn’t make a
difference. Except for people with supervisory roles, no one appears to be
permanent. The new law does not include any caps on how many temp agency
workers a company can hire, or time limits on how long they can be made to
work in the same job at the same workplace as a “temp.”

The bill also does not directly address injury liability — one of the most
significant financial incentives to use temp agencies. The new measures do
not explicitly make client companies and temp agencies both responsible if a
worker gets hurt on the job.

When asked about how current laws actually create incentive for companies to
use temp agencies to avoid liability for accidents, Flynn said: “We know
that’s not the right way of doing it in the long run and we need to work
with the WSIB, I think, to get a better system in place.”

Some changes are already underway. Previously, the temp agency sector had
its own insurance rate at the WSIB, which was lower than many high-risk
industries. That, critics said, provided companies with an incentive to
assign dangerous work to temps and give safer jobs to permanent hires, whose
injuries would have costly implications at the compensation board.

The WSIB will eliminate that loophole, which it says will “go a long way
towards making sure every business in Ontario takes safety seriously.” But
the changes will not take effect until 2019. Even then, temp agencies will
remain workers’ legal employer for the purposes of injury claims.

Some experts question why.

“Temp agencies used to be just labour brokers,” says the University of
Waterloo’s MacEachen. “They weren’t actually employers. They fought tooth
and nail to get this designation because it has some advantages for them.”

“(But) they have no control over work conditions. It’s bizarre.”

‘They know you’re replaceable’

After my month undercover, I meet with Sam Byjoo — a former employee of
Marmora Freezing Corp., an affiliated company that operates on the same site
as Fiera.

He started there as a minimum-wage temp in 2013, picking up his cash as I
did at a payday lender, he says. After nine months or so, he was made
permanent, was paid directly by the company, and received full health
coverage. But he still describes the workplace as an accident waiting to
happen.

“It’s really bad there,” he says. “I don’t even know the word to use.”

In his native Guyana, Byjoo took engineering courses and says he wasn’t
afraid to call out his supervisors when he saw something unsafe. He also led
a briefly successful drive at Marmora Freezing Corp. to form a union, but it
was swiftly disbanded. Byjoo was terminated due to “corporate restructuring”
earlier this year, he says.

He says he didn’t receive any training, relying instead on his own
background knowledge. He describes telling his manager that forklift drivers
should get certification and being advised that he should just have enough
experience to avoid them.

“No product can be damaged when it goes out the door,” he says. But Byjoo
feels what happens to workers is less of a concern.

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“When you’re an agency worker, they can fire you for any reason,” he says.
“They know you’re replaceable.”

The factory’s power dynamics don’t go unnoticed even if they are not openly
challenged. On a particularly frenetic day, which feels like an endless
torrent of shouting, I overhear a woman muttering to herself.

“I am a human being,” she says. “Not a robot.”

I look around the break room on my last shift. Some workers are calling
home. Some are mechanically chewing food, exhausted. Others have headphones
on — drowning out a Fiera-branded video that plays on a loop.

“You are the reason for our success,” the text on the screen tells us. “Our
employees are like family.”

Everyone else has been asked to come in the next day, a Saturday. I feel a
sinking wave of guilt that I will not be there. I call a co-worker on the
late night drive home to tell her I don’t think I will be coming back.

“What are you going to do?” she asks.

I mumble something vague. I’m tired of lying to everyone. It feels like
chance that I have the choice to leave, anyway. There is no difference
between the hard work of my parents, immigrants who worked in a factory too,
and that of people inside Fiera. But my parents built their lives in another
era, before the rise of precarious employment.

The woman on the phone fills my silence. Gently, as she has all month, she
urges me to go back to school.

“You are young,” she says. “Get a good job.”

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

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