CUPE5524 and the GRT

Hello Members and Friends of CUPE5524 – Academic Workers at the University of Waterloo!

As you all might have heard, bus drivers with Grand River Transit, which provides bus and ion services across the region, were on the edge of entering a potential strike position today. We now have a major update: last night, a tentative agreement was reached between GRT and UNIFOR Local 4304, which represents the local bus drivers.

This means that bus services will continue uninterrupted for our members! Until a ratification vote takes place, UNIFOR 4304 members will remain on the job and continue providing service across the region.

We at CUPE5524 would like to congratulate UNIFOR 4304 members for reaching this new agreement! Their efforts demonstrate the importance of collective action and the strength of workers standing together to secure fair working conditions.

We are proud to stand in solidarity with UNIFOR 4304 and celebrate this important step forward for transit workers in our community. When workers organize and act collectively, we all win!

In Solidarity,
The CUPE5524 Officer Team

Renison University College Sessional Faculty Union Drive

Hello members, friends, and allies of CUPE5524 – Academic Workers at the University of Waterloo!

As of just a few days ago, Renison University College Sessional Faculty began the process of holding a vote to unionize. As part of this union drive, we are happy to bust a number of common myths, and provide information to all the new potential members in RUC!

What can a union do for me?

The track record is clear. Workers who are members of a union receive higher wages than people without a union, enjoy better benefits and have more rights. Their workplaces are safer, they’re less likely to suffer harassment or discrimination and they get more respect. This is what we call the “union advantage”. All workers are protected by employment standards laws, but unionized workers are able to use collective bargaining to negotiate greater protections and improved wages and working conditions.

Can I be fired for signing a union card?

It is illegal for an employer to fire or suspend anyone for signing a union card or for being part of an organizing drive.

How much are the union dues?

CUPE Local 5524 dues are 2.25%. Union dues are not applied to overtime or other premium pay. Dues allow you and your union to negotiate and defend your rights and create conditions that will allow for a better workplace. In CUPE, there are two portions. National dues are 0.85 percent of base wages provide your National Staff Representative and specialist services including legal, research, communications, health & safety, WSIB, pay equity and more. The local portion of your dues provides such things as time for your locally elected representatives to work on your behalf, to take important issues to arbitration and cover the cost of local meetings. All dues are tax-deductible.

Will we have to go on strike?

In CUPE, the local union members are the only people who decide on a strike. Educating students, holding rallies, handing out information to the public, and making links with groups in the community are some other ways our union can show our power and influence. Striking is always a last resort and is extremely rare. The vast majority of CUPE settlements are reached without a single day of job action. However, in the event the Local membership determines a strike is necessary, CUPE has you covered with strike pay (which is non-taxable).

I would like a union in my workplace, but I don’t want to create any waves.

Every employee has a legal and constitutional right to join a union of their choice. It is illegal for an Employer to interfere with, restrain, intimidate, threaten, discriminate against an employee that seeks to bring a union into their workforce. It is also against the law for an Employer to question workers about their support for a union. The union certification process is confidential, so Employers are not entitled to know who signed cards. Votes are held by secret ballot.

My Employer says the union can’t guarantee increased wages or better working conditions. Is that true?

It’s true that increased wages, improved benefits and working conditions must be negotiated with the Employer after the union is certified by the Ontario Labour Relations Board. The statistics are clear though – on average unionized workers are paid significantly higher. Unionized workers are also more likely to have a pension plan and to enjoy better benefits and paid leaves.

The bottom line is that workers have more power to improve their working conditions when they come together collectively as a union. With CUPE’s professional representation and research support, a union will certainly improve your working conditions by bargaining for fair wages, better benefits, paid leaves, predictable schedules, protection from arbitrary dismissal and fair and transparent policies that apply to everyone.

Don’t unions just protect incompetent people?

The union can’t hire and fire. That’s management’s role. By law the union must represent its members fairly and without bias. If someone isn’t doing their job it’s up to management, not the union, to make them shape up, and to follow a fair process of discipline. Unions protect their members from arbitrary and discriminatory discipline. That’s our job.

Will quality of education suffer if we unionize?

On the contrary, unionization results in better service, better care, and more public accountability. Having a union means employees have new resources to help us make the case for better funding, better work organization and workplace improvements. It also means workers are protected when they speak out about problems. Unions fight against cutbacks to save jobs but they’re also fighting to maintain (and improve) the quality of service. It’s the union members who see first-hand how reduced services hurt the people they serve.

There are some things my Employer provides that I value. Can we lose them if we form a union?

No.The opposite is true. Without a union, the employer can change your benefits or hours of work at any time. It’s against the law for employers to retaliate against the union by taking away what you have now. Having a union contract and bargaining for improvements is one way of securing the benefits you’ve gained so far.

My Employer is suggesting that CUPE is an outsider. Is that true?

The union is not an outside organization that comes into your workplace. The Union is “YOU and Your co-workers”, who are treated unfairly coming together in your workplace to create collective power to better your working conditions and wages. CUPE is a union of more than 800,000 workers across the country who have come together in their respective workplace; Who would lend their support to each other and to you, to advance better working conditions for all.

Why CUPE and Universities?

More than 70,000 PSE workers in CUPE, more than 40,000 of them in Ontario universities Most members are academic workers (contract instructors, sessionals, TA/RA, continuing education), but we also represent thousands of trades, maintenance and custodial workers, administrative and technical staff, laboratory and classroom technicians, foodservice workers, residence workers and more. In Ontario, we have 123 bargaining units in the sector. We represent contract and sessional instructors at York, UofT, Waterloo, King’s, Trent, TMU, McMaster, Guelph, Carleton and Brock.

Our contracts:
CUPE has the contracts that lead the sector, not only in wages, but in benefits, leaves and job protections. All of these must be negotiated, but more and more contract instructors are getting health benefits through bargaining, as well as things like academic/conference leaves, parental leaves and job protections through seniority. CUPE is also leading the way with some of the first language on job protection from AI, and most contracts have language around retraining that will pertain to AI systems. Many of the ways that AI touches our work will be the focus of major university bargaining campaigns this year at UofT, York and elsewhere.

How does CUPE work?

CUPE is a democracy. At the local level, you elect your leaders, the co-workers who will represent you at the bargaining table, vote on proposals going to the table and any agreement made there, and even set the local dues rate. You also elect people to represent you at the National Convention, where decisions are made democratically that affect all members. But everything affecting your workplace is made by you and the members of your local. Your local is supported by an experience National Staff Representative and a host of specialist services.

What is a collective agreement?

It is an agreement between the employer and workers on the terms and conditions of work. It is a set of rules clearly laid out that everyone must follow, including your boss. Your CUPE collective agreement does more than just guarantee wages and benefits. It provides a series of protections and rights that non-union workers do not have. Your collective agreement also means you don’t have to negotiate everything on your own. Wages, benefits, and working conditions are typically much worse in non-union workplaces, and not everyone can safely push for better from their employer all on their own. Together you have greater bargaining power and better protection.

What new rights do I get?

Many rights will be negotiated in your collective agreement. But some come immediately after a successful vote and others are guaranteed to be in your collective agreement. Right now, your employer can dismiss you without cause. After you join a union, they cannot. They also will not be able to arbitrarily change your terms and conditions of work. You are also guaranteed a fair grievance policy by law.

ONE FINAL NOTE!

HUGE congratulations to the Sessional Faculty at Renison University College! And we hope to see you join the team soon!

CUPE + GSA Info Session AND Voting Announcement

Graduate students spent years fighting hard to form our own union for TA & RAs at UW.
Since certification, our union successfully protected more than $500,000 total in compensation being taken from hundreds of graduate students across Arts, Environment, Science, and Engineering.
Having unionized now, as graduate students, we should be informed about some of the critical negotiations that are part of our new democratic processes instituted to improve our conditions of work and our wages. These conversations are happening between our bargaining team and the university. Negotiated terms are formalized in a legally binding document: the Collective Agreement (CA).
After almost two years of active talks, our elected bargaining committee and CUPE representatives recently came to an agreement with the administration. They are proposing our first ever tentative Collective Agreement. So, we are hosting 2 info sessions on this:
  • OFFICIAL Contract Meeting: ONLINE on Sat, Feb 21, 1:30-4:30pm (register here)
  • GSA + CUPE Info Session: SLC 3126, Tuesday, Feb 24, at 10:30am
For this proposed CA to come into effect, a majority of union members need to vote YES to approve it. Voting will be open from Saturday, Feb 21, 2026 until 10am on Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026.
If you have been a TA or RA in the last two years (since January 2024), you are eligible to vote on whether we ratify this proposed CA.
These info sessions are a critical opportunity for you as a grad worker to learn about specific articles in the CA and how they will impact you and your coworkers. These sessions exist to be transparent to our membership about the negotiation process and contents of the CA.
We encourage you to go to this event, become informed about your workplace, and participate in your workplace democracy.
Reach out to us at CUPE5524@uwaterloo.ca if you have questions or concerns about this or anything else related to your work at UW.

A Tentative Agreement Has Been Reached!

📢 Hello members and friends of CUPE5524 – Sessional Instructors, TAs, and RAs at the University of Waterloo! We are here with BIG NEWS! A TENTATIVE AGREEMENT HAS BEEN REACHED! 🎉🥳

This has come after YEARS of work, including a recent 41 hour bargaining session over 3 days that ended at 5am last night! Now, we are happy to announce that both units have a tentative agreement!

Keep in mind, a tentative agreement isn’t the final contract. Now, it goes to you, the members of CUPE5524, to vote on whether you wish to accept the agreement or not, so keep an eye on your email for more information!

If you vote in favour, this will become our first ever contract! Otherwise, we will be back to bargaining to get you the contract you want!

A huge thank you to EVERYONE on the bargaining team. This was an incredible amount of work, and it couldn’t happen without you!

 

Enough is Enough – University of Waterloo Stonewalls Our Bargaining

(The following is copied-and-pasted from an email sent out to all members on August 19th, 2025. There have been updated since this came out. Please check your email for updates as they arrive!)

Hello members of CUPE5524 – TAs, RAs, and Sessional Instructors at the University of Waterloo,
Since October 2024, your Bargaining Committee has been meeting with the University, fighting to secure a fair contract for Sessionals (Unit 0) and Graduate TAs/RAs (Unit 1). Since our last Bargaining update in May, what we have faced at the table these past 3 months is nothing short of outrageous.
Here is what we have experienced:
  • June 16 – 18: We tabled ALL remaining non-monetary AND monetary items – benefits, paid leave, bursaries, holidays – everything except wages.
  • July 7 – 9: With two CUPE National representatives on our side, we bargained for Unit 0, where we put forward a wage proposal for Sessionals.
  • July 16: At 2 PM, the Employer admitted they don’t know how much money that they have in the budget, so they couldn’t discuss wages (which we had already proposed one week prior). One hour later, talks ended without discussing relevant items.
  • July 17: The bargaining that day was cancelled.
  • August 12 – 14: We clearly told the Employer, months in advance, that we wanted these days for Unit 1 – TAs and RAs. The Employer knew this fact. Instead, UW told us on Aug. 12 they could not start on Unit 1 at all. After we reminded them of their obligation to bargain under the Labour Relations Act, it appears the employer is going through the motions of bargaining without any intention of reaching an agreement, and they have indicated they will sign nothing. After 3 days of bargaining, we received no counter proposals from them on the TA/RA unit. Why? Because the Board of Governors has ordered them to finish Unit 0 first. They will not even form a committee for Unit 1 until late September. This is a year and a half after Unit 1 won certification and gave notice to bargain.
What does this mean?
The Employer is deliberately disrespecting your work and dragging out this process. We think they are avoiding bargaining by only engaging at a surface level.
We will not sit quietly. And neither should you.
We need to be ready to fight back. We need to show that we won’t accept any delays, excuses, or disrespect.
Here is what you can do right now:
  • Email us with your questions, concerns, and ideas. We need your voices now more than ever.
  • Talk to your fellow students and coworkers about what is happening. The more people know, the stronger we are.
  • Follow us on social media to stay up to date and help spread the word. On all platforms, we are @cupe5524.
  • Watch for our next emails. When news happens, you will be the first to know.
The Employer is stalling. We are organizing.
In Solidarity,
CUPE5524 Officer Team
CUPE5524 logo with a black and white version of Gizmo The Goose.

We Stand With CUPE2073!

While it may go without saying, we at CUPE5524 are PROUD to announce that WE STAND WITH CUPE2073! This small group of workers has an outsized impact, delivering critical programs for thousands of Deaf and hard of hearing Ontarians. They deserve our support!

It’s time to band together and show our support to our fellow workers. If you can, go over to the strike website to learn more: https://cupe.on.ca/chsstrike/

You can also sign their e-petition here: https://cupe.on.ca/chs/

EGSA + CUPE Joint Info Session – May 13

Hello, Environment Students, TAs, RAs, and members of CUPE 5524!

We are happy to announce that the EGSA and CUPE 5524 will be hosting a joint info session for all graduate students! This will be your chance to learn about the union, ask questions, meet your representatives, and get your voice heard for concerns you have faced on campus and at Waterloo.

The CUPE 5524 officers will be giving a presentation about what they do and how you can get involved. Then, they will be hosting a Q&A. where you can ask any questions you have and talk with the team members themselves. Free pizza will be provided, and there may just be some prizes available!

The info session will be on Tuesday, May 13th, from 2pm to 4pm in EV3-1408. If you are interested in attending, or even just getting some free food, please RSVP below and get entered to win in a prize draw!

See you all there! In solidarity,
CUPE5524 logo with a black and white version of Gizmo The Goose.

CUPE5524 Commemorates May Day

[Taken From CUPE National] Defending labour rights, equity and economic justice is more urgent than ever. Our rights and quality of life are under increasing threat from the growing push to privatize public services, the staggering rise in the cost of living, and attacks from the far right.

May 1 commemorates the massacre at Haymarket Square in Chicago in 1886. On this day, workers around the world have taken to the streets to celebrate their collective power, defend their rights, and demand equity and economic justice.

CUPE celebrates International Workers’ Day, or May Day, in solidarity with millions around the world who denounce exploitation, defend their right to unionize, and demand decent and safe working conditions.

In Canada, many workers mark May 1 with rallies. The day is a moment to remember the major victories achieved by worker activism and solidarity. These include the eight-hour workday, paid sick leave and the right to a safe workplace.

International Workers’ Day is a chance for us to celebrate the labour movement’s collective strength, and our ability to protect and fight for our public services, the working class and our hard-earned rights.

International solidarity is our best tool in the fight for workers’ rights. CUPE encourages everyone to join this worldwide mobilization.

CUPE5524 and The 2025 Federal Election

Hello members of Local 5524,

We hope you are well. Please find below a number of updates regarding the upcoming federal election. This comes as an imperative from a vote that took place at our most recent General Members’ Meeting on April 1, 2025.

CUPE has a long history with politics and Canadian elections, and this election is no different. CUPE National has launched the CUPE Votes campaign, where it has officially endorsed the NDP and stands against Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives. CUPE National stands for workers’ rights, public services, pharmacare, and federal anti-scab legislation (amongst other principles).

CUPE Local 5524 firmly believes that to vote is a freedom of thought and speech, as well as a right. Everyone should be given the option to independently be able to make an informed decision in this upcoming election, and CUPE5524 encourages this.

As this election approaches, we would like to announce that, as a result of the vote at the most recent GMM, CUPE5524 has officially endorsed the Palestine Platform. This platform is outlined in votepalestine.ca and below in brief:

  1. That a two-way arms embargo on Israel be imposed,
  2. That Canada end all involvement in illegal Israeli settlements,
  3. That Anti-Palestine racism be addressed and that freedom of expression on Palestine be protected,
  4. That Canada recognizes the State of Palestine, and
  5. That protection and funding for Gaza relief efforts be provided.

Furthermore, the Palestine Platform has provided a list of all MPs or Candidates who have endorsed it already, which can be found here. In the electoral district of Waterloo, where the University of Waterloo is located, the candidate for the New Democratic Party, Héline Chow, and the candidate for the Green Party of Canada, Simon Guthrie, have so far endorsed the platform.

In preparing for this election, CUPE5524 officially encourages everyone to engage with your MPs and local candidates, and ask them to publicly state their views in regards to Palestine, and to ask for their support in regards to the Palestine Platform. If you wish to support the platform as well, and potentially pledge to not support candidates who don’t stand up for Palestine, you can do so on their website.

If you have any questions about the votes that took place at the April GMM, please do not hesitate to reach out. Minutes from this meeting will be available shortly, and will be attached to notice for the next GMM (tentatively set for Tuesday May 20, 2025, 5-7 PM).

For more resources on the voting process in this upcoming election, you can visit elections.ca. You can vote today at any Elections Canada office until 6 PM, or on Election Day (April 28) at your assigned polling station.

In Solidarity,

CUPE5524 logo with a black and white version of Gizmo The Goose.

Long COVID Awareness: Silent Walk

Hello everyone! Recently, the Faculty of Health Dean’s Advisory Committee on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Anti-Racism wanted to share an event with all of the members of Local 5524! So, coming from them, here is the Long COVID Awareness Event!


Did you know that some people experience ongoing health challenges after a COVID-19 infection? Long COVID, also known as Post-COVID Condition, affects millions worldwide, impacting daily life, work, and well-being. There are currently no Health Canada approved treatments.

Join the UWaterloo community for a walk on March 27 to support those with Long COVID and promote awareness. The walk starts from the Health Expansion building at noon.

Learn More & Register: bit.ly/walk-register

A poster displaying the Long COVID Awareness Silent Walk event on March 27th, at 12:00 noon in the Health building.