Feb. 5, 2012:
Scuffles disrupt labourers’ union meeting
Workers threw chairs, pushed and shoved each other during a rowdy construction union meeting on Sunday over questions about a top training centre executive who resigned after revelations of spending and operating improprieties.
Irate members forcibly removed two workers who suffered minor injuries in separate scuffles at the Labourers’ International Union of North America Local 183 hall in North York, headquarters for the biggest construction local on the continent.
Police arrived minutes later but there were no further physical disruptions at the meeting of more than 250 workers.
“There were chairs flying,†union member Dave Aguiar said after the meeting. “I tried to break up a scuffle at the front and on the way back to my seat, I got tripped by a guy. Someone took a chair and whipped it across my leg. After that, they just piled on.â€
Aguiar said members quickly pulled him up and carried him by his arms and legs out the hall.
“I’m not impressed with the way I was treated,†he added. “I was physically assaulted.â€
Another member,
Fabiano De Almeida, said workers surrounded him, grabbed his neck and escorted him out of the monthly meeting.
That came after De Almeida pressed Local 183 president Nelson Melo to read internal correspondence regarding John Mandarino, former administrator of the union’s major regional training centre.
“You better behave yourself,†said Melo as some workers yelled “what are you hiding†and “transparency.â€
When some workers persisted, Melo, who did not read the correspondence, directed them to “leave the meeting in peace.â€
Local 183 business manager Jack Oliveira told the meeting that members who asked questions about Mandarino are linked to the union’s previous leadership and are “politically motivated.†Those leaders lost a close, bitter election fight last summer.
“If there is any undermining of this organization, steps will be taken to stop this once and for all. . . . I will bring charges against you,†Oliveira warned.
Aguiar and De Almeida said the local’s tough tactics at the meeting are designed to discourage other members from speaking out and learning about their union.
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At Sunday’s meeting,
another member asked union executives about Mandarino’s status as Canadian director of the Labourers’ Tri-Fund, which promotes workplace safety and employment for workers, and receives significant financial support from Local 183.
The executives indicated they did not know about Mandarino’s Tri-Fund status.
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