Women Working

From the beginning, many members of Vancouver Women’s Caucus thought the organization of working women should be a top priority. Those of us that that saw ourselves as Marxists were convinced that the organization of working women was a critical part of building a revolutionary working class movement. We believed that the organization of working women must be a major long-term task of the women’s liberation movement.

Working Women’s Workshop Jan 1970 – Oct 1971

In January 1970 we formed the Working Women’s Workshop as part of Vancouver Women’s Caucus. The Workshop was made up of mostly students who worked part-time and recognized the importance of women workers in winning the demands of the Women’s Caucus. We determined our tasks were research, publications and education of ourselves and women workers. We decided to move off campus to an office downtown to facilitate reaching out to Vancouver women workers. Initially we moved into a tiny, windowless office in the basement of the Labour Temple then, when the Women’s Centre opened on Carrall Street, we moved there.

At the time, the workplace was even more a tyranny than it is today. We were outraged at the discrimination and humiliation that women faced every day at work. There was no human rights legislation, very little labour standards legislation, and no accountability for the Labour Relations Board. In unorganized workplaces, workers could be fired for any reason or no reason at all. Advertisements for jobs were divided between “Help Wanted Male” and “Help Wanted Female.” Sexual harassment was everywhere and seemed to be an acceptable perk for men who worked in areas where women were a majority. We were treated as part of the décor. There were arbitrary, management imposed dress codes. Women were required to wear skirts or dresses or, in a big breakthrough, “pantsuits” so long as the top and the pants were made of the same fabric and the jacket was long enough to cover our butts. We were treated like children.

All of this was discouraging. But at the same time we saw the enormous potential power of working women. Our employers were among the most profitable corporations in the country and their profits depended on our labour. We believed we could change the world if the power of women in the work force could be brought to bear on the problems faced by all women – discrimination in all aspects of social life, denial of our rights to abortion and birth control, lack of quality child care, and of course, equal pay and equal opportunity at work.

We knew that in order to win our demands, we needed economic power. We needed the right to strike. But when we met with union representatives to talk about organizing our workplaces, they looked and acted a lot like our bosses. They were patronizing, disrespectful and seemed more interested in flirting with us than listening to us. The union reps talked about how women were hard to organize because we were only working for pin money and only working until we found a husband. When we researched these unions that had the “jurisdiction” to organize women workers, we found that they were “international” unions. The office workers’, restaurant workers’ and retail workers’ unions were all headquartered in various U.S. cities. We were shocked at the powers of the “international” President and the provisions that allowed them to replace local officers and override the votes of local memberships.

At this time in B.C., there was a new movement within the established trade unions known as the independent Canadian trade union movement. New “breakaway” unions were being formed. Union members in the steel, forest, and pulp and paper industries, tired of the lack of democracy, sweetheart contracts and in some cases, corruption, within their so called international unions, left their existing unions to join newly formed, locally controlled, Canadian unions. They inspired us and made us think about the possibility and potential of an independent, feminist union.

Working Women’s Association Oct 1971 – Oct 1972

The message of the women’s movement was that “nobody could do it for us”; that we had the skills, passion, competence and ability to organize and fight our own oppression. We determined that we needed a democratic, feminist, militant union. A union that would develop new organizing strategies and new demands never yet fought for. We thought it would spark a new working class movement, something like the effect the CIO had in the organization of industrial workers.

 

In the summer of 1971, the Working Women’s Workshop began planning for the formation of a women’s union. We announced the founding convention for Oct 30, 1971. But there weren’t enough people ready to form a new union. Instead of a new union, we formed the Working Women’s Association. The aims of the new group were basically the same as the Working Women’s Workshop: public educationals, publishing materials about the problems faced by women workers, provide information about unions and support the struggles of organized and unorganized workers.

Over the next year, we leafleted hospitals in support of hospital workers’ fight for equal pay, we picketed Medieval Inn with the striking waitresses, we helped the union organizers at Smitty’s Pancake House and Pizza Patio, we held public meetings at the downtown library on unemployment insurance, lack of job security and lack of quality daycare, we wrote and distributed booklets about women’s work and organized educationals on the history of women workers in BC. As well, we met with clerical workers at the University of B.C. After two failed attempts at organizing with existing unions, they had decided to from their own union. Their first attempt with their own union also failed.

In August 1972, the Working Women’s Association left the Women’s Centre and opened our own office. We paid the office rent by members’ pledges since most of us were working and those who weren’t working staffed the new office.

By the fall, the WWA had a mailing list of about 150 and there were about 30 activists. Three committees had been set up- department store workers, office workers and restaurant workers. The committees had begun to meet separately from the regular WWA meetings to discuss the specific problems of organizing in each industry.

We held more strategy discussions. These were difficult meetings. We were sick and tired of talking about the same things over and over. Did we plan on being an information group forever? One thing that came out of these meetings was the realization that we still needed to know more about unions – the history of the trade union movement, the differences in unions, the process of unionizing, contract negotiations, the labour laws, etc. In the fall of 1972, we held a series of seminars at which trade unionists, most of whom were from the new independent Canadian unions, spoke on various topics.

After the seminars we had plenty of data on how to form a union, how to organize our workplace and of course we knew why we needed one. It was time to put up or shut up.