Labour & Trade Unions à Midtown Toronto, Toronto, ON

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Résultats à proximité dans la catégorie Labour & Trade Unions à Midtown Toronto, Toronto

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1482 BATHURST STREET, MIDTOWN TORONTO, Toronto, M5P 3H1

(416) 393-0440
Emploi et Ressources de carrière, labor organizations, Organisations ouvrières, Labor union, Services professionnels
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1482 Bathurst Street, MIDTOWN TORONTO, Toronto, M5P 3H1

(416) 393-8900
Labour Organizations, Membership Organizations, Labor organizations

890 YONGE STREET, MIDTOWN TORONTO, Toronto, M4W 3P4

(416) 968-2549
labor organizations, Organisations ouvrières, Emploi et Ressources de carrière, Services professionnels, Employee, Labor union

Résultats à proximité dans la catégorie Labour & Trade Unions

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703 Spadina Ave., 2nd floor, Toronto, M5S 2J4

(416) 946-7620
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200- 376 Bathurst Street, Toronto, M5T 2S6

(416) 593-7057

17 Belmont St, Toronto, M5R 1P9

(416) 512-9493
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2239 Yonge St, Toronto, M4S 2B5

(416) 979-2709
Organization, Labor union
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20 Eglinton Avenue West, Toronto, M4R 1K8

(416) 440-7981
Toronto Public Library Workers Union Local 4948 represents the 2300 workers at the Toronto Public Library. We are committed to protecting our public library and those who deliver its excellent service. Our roots as a union go back nearly one hundred years to the early days of the 20th century, when Toronto Civic workers began organizing. We are affiliated with the Canadian Union of Public Employees as Local 4948.

110 Yonge St, MOUNT PLEASANT WEST, Toronto, M5C 1T4

(416) 487-1114
The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) was founded in 1920. With its 60, 000 members, the Institute is the largest union in Canada representing scientists and professionals employed at the federal and some provincial and territorial levels of government. The Institute was founded to protect the interests of professional public employees and became a bargaining agent following the implementation of the Public Service Staff Relations Act (PSSRA) in 1967. The Institute is the bargaining agent for more than 41 knowledge-based Groups and negotiates with 27 different employers in seven different jurisdictions. The Institute serves its members with approximately 140 full-time staff in its National Office and Regional Offices in Halifax, Montréal, the National Capital, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton and Vancouver.

900-90 Eglinton Ave. East, Toronto, M4P 2Y3

416-861-1291
The Unifor Public Review Board (PRB) is a continuation of a Tribunal that was initially created by the international United Autoworkers at the behest of its then President, Walter Reuther. In 1985, it was adopted by the Canadian Autoworkers Union when it left the international. In 2013, it found its current home in Unifor, the amalgamation of the Canadian Autoworkers Union and the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada.
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625 CHURCH ST, DOWNTOWN, Toronto, M4Y 2G1

(416) 485-7670
Association or organization
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229 Wallace Ave, Toronto, M6H 1V5

(416) 368-0072
Labor union

26 Cecil Street, GRANGE PARK, Toronto, M5T 1N1

(416) 593-4466
lundi au vendredi : 10h a 12h30 - 14h a 18h de USWA Injured Workers Program Association Inc

25 Cecil Street, GRANGE PARK, Toronto, M5T 1N1

(416) 977-7274
Business & Professional Services, Employment & Career Resources, Labour Organizations
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85 Grenville Street, BAY CLOVERHILL, Toronto, M5S 3A2

(416) 964-8833
The Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) is the union representing 59, 000 registered nurses and allied health professionals and more than 13, 000 nursing students providing care in Ontario hospitals, long-term care facilities, public health, the community, clinics and industry.
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244 Eglinton Avenue East, MOUNT PLEASANT WEST, Toronto, M4P 1K2

(416) 481-4491
2010 holds many promises for the PWU. With our Skilled Trades initiative well underway we look to the members for new ideas. Do you have any ideas on the direction you would like to see the PWU take in 2010? If so, email us your idea(s), we d love to hear them.
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2 Carlton St, DOWNTOWN, Toronto, M5B 1J3

416-488-3000
LABOUR UNION, Association or organization, SERVICES
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505 University Ave, DOWNTOWN, Toronto, M5G 1X3

(416) 326-7500
The Ontario Labour Relations Board (the "Board") was established by section 2 of the Labour Relations Act, 1948 and is continued by subsection 110(1) of the Labour Relations Act, 1995 S.O. 1995, C1, as amended. The Board is an adjudicative agency of the Government of Ontario and its' staff is appointed under the Public Service Act. The Board is an independent, adjudicative tribunal issuing decisions based upon the evidence presented and submissions made to it by the parties, and upon its interpretation and determination of the relevant legislation and jurisprudence. It plays a fundamental role on the labour relations regime in Ontario and encourages harmonious relations between employers, employees and trade unions by dealing with matters before it as expeditiously and as fairly as reasonably possible. The OLRB's mandate is to provide, as an independent tribunal, excellence in administrative justice through the effective resolution of labour and employment disputes. The Ontario Labour Court was to have a short life span, attributable to a number of factors: the prohibitive cost of proceedings; the Judges’ apparent dislike of labour matters, and most importantly, the federal government’s decision to control labour relations matters during World War II. The Ontario Labour Court was replaced by the Ontario Labour Relations Board, pursuant to The Labour Relations Board Act, 1944, which was still subject to the federal Wartime Labour Relations Board. Following the Second World War, the division of powers between the federal and provincial governments was re-established, and labour relations were returned largely to the hands of the provincial legislatures. In 1947, the Ontario Labour Relations Board became independent of the Federal Government. The next year, The Labour Relations Act, 1948 empowered the Lieutenant-Governor in Council to make regulations "in the same form and to the same effect as that.

433 Jarvis, #615, Toronto, M4Y 2G9

(416) 871-5580
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350 Victoria Street, Toronto, M5B 2K3

(416) 979-5159
Labor union