“Toronto’s hardworking public transit workers are pleased with the new collective agreement, which recognizes our vital role in the communities we serve through fair wages and benefits,” said Local 113 president Frank Grimaldi in a statement.
The TTC had sought to remove language from the agreement that prohibited contracting out transit service. It also wanted to secure permission to introduce a part-time workforce, and to eliminate a requirement that it pay a 25 per cent per hour premium to employees who work on Sundays.
TTC spokesperson Brad Ross said the agency has no plans for a large-scale contracting out of transit service. But it had been contemplating enlisting York Region Transit to operate the Dufferin North bus route, and using non-TTC drivers as part of a “micro-transit” pilot project that would engage private for-hire vehicles to supplement regular transit service.
“It’s language that we felt doesn’t give us as management the flexibility to do things we might want to do in the future,” he said of the contracting out prohibition.
Ross called Sunday premium pay an “antiquated concept,” and argued introducing part-time work would “improve scheduling efficiency” and increase the pool of employees available to the TTC during peak service periods and special events.
Kaplan dismissed those proposals however, writing in his decision that there was no demonstrated need for such a “drastic change” to the terms of the collective agreement.
The arbitration award will give Local 113 members an across-the-board wage increase of 6 per cent over three years, which is more than the 5 per cent increase over four years that unions representing City of Toronto inside and outside workers won in 2016.
According to Ross, the TTC is still calculating how much the award will cost the agency.