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From: Leo Parascondola (Graduate Student Caucus) To:
Workplace
Date: Friday - April
6, 2001 10:57 AM
Friends,
From another list comes news that
Accu-Fax Investigations, Inc., a private security firm, has been collecting
information and spying during the MUSA (McMaster University Staff Assoc.) strike.
It has come to our attention that an
organization (Accu-Fax Investigations Inc.) is operating on
campus with the ability to scan the conversations of
faculty, staff, and students from a distance. Since this organization is
collecting intelligence information
related to the MUSA strike, we suggest that, for your own safety, you may wish
to exercise caution in what you say to
others while on campus.
Students have reported being
followed in the library by men with walkie-talkies.
This company's web sites are
at:
http://www.accufax.on.ca/
http://www.employmentscreening.com/
According to the Private
Investigator Directory, Accu-Fax is a member of the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service
(CSIS).
For your information, we forward,
with permission of the author, the following article which appeared in today's
edition of View Magazine (Volume 7,
Number 14, page 9).
_________________________
EYE ON THE LINE:
Entering a New Era of
Management-Employee Mistrust.
Randy Kay
VIEW Magazine
What do Sudbury miners and striking University staff
have in common? They are both on surveillance tape taken by agents of Accu-Fax
-- what many have called "union-busters.".
Accu-Fax Investigations Inc. is a
private security firm specializing in "labour dispute services."
Their web site
states that "regardless of your
labour disruption, Accu-Fax will keep you operational."
Over 1500 striking McMaster
University Staff Association (MUSA) members are currently being watched by
Accu-Fax.
MUSA Vice-President Diana Parker
says that while no incidents have come up between the watchers and the watched
she
is nevertheless troubled by the
McMaster administration's choice of security firms.
"What bother's me is the
University is using a company whose web site happily proclaims that it will
supply replacement workers and will cheerfully engage in strikebreaking."
Parker says that the
administration's choice of security along with their "unfortunate strike
history" sends "a very
poor signal" to MUSA employees.
The month old MUSA strike was
preceded by 3 other labour disruptions on campus within the last school year.
Pickets are video-taped at the
University entrances by Accu-Fax
employees stationed in vans on
University property
McMaster University Director of Security
Ron Thorn won't confirm or deny that Accu-Fax has been hired. "I'm not
sure
I want to give that information
out.there could be some pressure put on them from outside.I don't want
picketers
putting pressure on the surveillance
team."
Thorn admits to hiring a
surveillance team to do "video work." The current spy team was hired
for a number of
reasons, including "strictly
economical, availability, and their good record" according to Thorn.
Both Andrea Farquhar and Gillian
Howard of McMaster's public relations department were "unable to
answer" queries
about McMaster's choice of labour
security firms.
Renee Jarvis, Labour Relations
Coordinator with the Hamilton
police is the first to confirm that Accu-Fax is the
company working the site.
Accu-Fax advertises that many of
their security and private
investigators are "ex-military or
law enforcement" personnel.
They also claim references are their
"best sales tool" but Darrell Parsons, President of the Mississauga based
company won't answer any questions once
he establishes that VIEW is Hamilton's
equivalent to certain Toronto
weeklies.
"Yeah, see, I apologize, I
really gotta run" is all he says before hanging up.
What Parsons won't say, the Accu-Fax
web site offers; transportation services with "drivers experienced in
crossing
hostile picket lines" and willing
to use "any mode necessary" to get "personnel" in,
including buses "strike proofed
with 'lexan' glass to protect
passengers," and even helicopters.
They have "on numerous
occasions supplied replacement workers" and they have relocated
manufacturing facilities
"when necessary."
The University is already using
replacement labour by moving part-time employees to full-time, increasing the
hours
available to student employees, and
hiring retirees, says MUSA's Parker.
"This causes the strike to go
longer, it draws the pain out for
students, MUSA and the
Administration" she says.
Rick Grylls, acting president of
Mine, Mill and Smelters Union local 598 of the Canadian Auto Workers says
Accu-Fax
are basically modern day Pinkertons.'
(notorious 19C strike breakers.)
Grylls was the union's strike
coordinator during a six and a half month strike last year in Sudbury where, Grylls
says, Accu-Fax used "front-line
stormtroopers" to escort replacement workers (or scabs) through picket
lines.
The use of scab labour was made
legal by the Mike Harris Tories, when they killed a law brought in under the
NDP
government of Bob Rae limiting the use
of replacement workers during strikes.
Besides labour dispute services
Accu-Fax will provide "crisis/emergency management, electronic sweeping
and
debugging, bodyguards, merchandise
escort, and mobile patrol and response, uniformed security guards " and
more.
Accu-Fax has been hired by Hamilton's Slater Steels
for a potential strike involving members of United Steelworkers
of America (USWA) local 4752.
USWA Local 4752 Union President Jim
Howe says that the hiring of Accu-Fax is "a complete turnaround" for
Slater,
where he says union/management have
historically had a good
relationship.
"We've never had any major
problems," he says. A strike at Slater 4 years ago was a four-day affair
and didn't
involve hiring private security.
"This reeks of American style
tactics," says Howe, "It's intimidation and it's rubbing the wrong
way with our guys."
During last year's five and a
half-week long McMaster Teaching
Assistants' strike (TA's represented by
CUPE 3906),
Thorn hired London Protection to do the
video work. London Protection International advertises many of the same
services as Accu-Fax, services that
include trucks, vans and buses to drive replacement workers, management or
goods
through picket lines.
CUPE 3906 Business Manager Mike Skinner
says that while surveillance is ostensibly there for the "protection"
of
picketers, he agrees that the effect is
one of intimidation.
MUSA has been on strike for 32 days
as of Monday, April 02, 2001.
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