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09 March 2005
Impending layoffs at Ontario's public broadcaster
Canadian
Media Guild | TNG Canada
Local 30213
Up to 10 Canadian Media Guild positions
are being eliminated at TVOntario as a result of the public
service broadcaster’s
budget plan for the 2005-06 fiscal year.
The broadcaster is owned and operated by
the Ontario government. Although revenue from the province
is not decreasing, a large percentage of funding is targeted
to several educational initiatives, rather than to on-air
programming. This reduces TVOntario's operating budget by
$4.7
million.
Two TVO series, the long-running and award-winning Imprint and
the health series Second Opinion, are to
be cancelled. Other series on both the English and French
networks will undergo a belt-tightening exercise.
"Management has stated that its priority this year
is to generate more revenue. At the same time, though, our
capacity to produce programs is being cut back," says
the Guild's TVO branch president, Carol Burtin Fripp.
TVOntario management has identified
a total of 10 CMG positions that will be affected by the
proposed changes to programs and programming priorities.
TVOntario's stated goal is to reduce its overall number
of employees — CMG members
and others — by approximately eight per cent, or 40
positions, over the course of the 2005-06 fiscal year.
The CMG is following the process
closely to ensure that individual members' rights are protected. "It gives
a whole new meaning to the expression 'lean and mean'. We're
concerned that some of the layoffs appear to be targeting
specific people rather than jobs," says CMG staff representative
Keith Maskell.
The collective agreement between the Guild and TVOntario
contains very specific language to deal with staff reductions.
If positions absolutely have to disappear, the Guild wants
to make sure that the process is fair and objective, and
not used to get rid of particular employees.
(This story first appeared on the Canadian
Media Guild web site.)
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