Uniting ARCCAW members across Alberta
Summer 2014
Inside
Hitting Home
UBC’s 300-hitter program a game changer for journeymen
JOB
Victor Pereira of Drytec has the interior systems market cornered
Legendary Lessons
Third-year apprentices are treated to hands-on learning in Vegas
Alberta Carpenter/ Scaffolding Competition; ARCCAW’s new Calgary digs
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Executive Secretary Treasurer’s
REPORT
Summer Brings New Challenges Martyn A. Piper
T
o say things are busy at the Regional Council right
now is an understatement. There is plenty of action and plenty of issues on the table. We recently concluded the 300-hitter program at the International Training Center in Las Vegas, where 146 of our front-line journeymen from all four locals attended extensive training on leadership, mentoring, and communications. A couple of months before that we had 25 third-year apprentices attend similar training in Vegas and in between, a dozen members attended the mentorship program. The organizational and logistical challenges of this made it no easy task, but thanks to some intensive and time-consuming work by Kim Belbin at the Training Centre, all went off without a hitch. Thanks also to Derrick Schulte, George Wilson and Dave Knight for shepherding the attendees throughout these three-day events. We now have the results of the scaffolding survey and, while it clearly shows no support for scaffolding as a designated occupation in Alberta, there is clearly interest in having some level of accreditation for scaffolders. The question we and our contractors must now turn our attention to, is whether scaffolding should become a designated trade like that of a carpenter or millwright, which on the surface may seem appealing, but which changes the game considerably for our union, as the program would then be administered by Alberta Enterprise and Advanced Education. Schooling would take place in colleges (such as SAIT Polytechnic and NAIT). There would be trade advisory committees, yet the trade would remain non-compulsory. We will be meeting our signatory contractors sometime in August to discuss next steps, as any move forward like this would have significant consequences for the Carpenters’ Training program. We must come up with a unified position with our contractors as the government department needs to be notified before the end of September as to our position. As I write this article, we are having some complex discussions with the contractors and the building trades with respect to drug and alcohol testing processes. It seems whichever way we turn the program is wrought with challenges. Of particular concern is how the Case Management Aftercare program is managed and how it dovetails with RSAP, return-to-work agreements, in-house residential care, availability and funding. There are no quick fixes and I think it is best said that it is a work in progress. Even though the expiry of the construction collective agreements is some way off, we are in the early planning stages of sorting through issues with our building trades partners, determining which issues 4
HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
will fall into framework bargaining and negotiated on a collective basis, and which issues we will take to our respective trade tables in the fall. Please provide your input into the process by accessing the bargaining survey on the Regional Council website. The result of the successful Ply Gem/Gienow merger has presented new challenges as we work with the company to combine the two units into one. Unfortunately, there have been a number of labour relations implications, but as of last weekend’s meetings I am optimistic we have put the lion’s share of issues to rest. The total number of members in the two facilities we now represent is more than 650 people. The much-awaited Labour Code Review was made public in the spring of 2014. It is a well written factual history of construction labour relations that reaches back into the early 1970s. Andrew C.L. Sims, the author, addressed most if not all issues that have at one time or another surfaced in Alberta. While the recommendations do not roll back the legislation we have today, which is particularly challenging when it comes to organizing, the review does arrive at a balanced perspective for which we have indicated support. However, due to the uncertainty surrounding the impending changes to the provincial leadership, we’ve put the recommendations on the back burner. Hopefully we can revisit the matter once the dust settles down the hill. The summer, as always, brings Local picnics, golf tournaments and other social events when members, family and friends can meet jobsite colleagues in a less formal setting than; it is these events that build that sense of solidarity amongst members. Hopefully, you have taken the opportunity to partake in these social gatherings. That’s it for now. Enjoy the rest of the summer.
HAVE YOUR SAY Have your say in proposal development for 2014-15 construction collective bargaining: www.albertacarpenters.com-members-nextcontract/opinionplease
Contents Undeliverable mail should be directed to ARCCAW 200-15210 123 Ave Edmonton, AB T5V 0A3 Email: lhelmeczi@albertacarpenters.com Canadian Publications Mail Product Sales Agreement # 40063788
PUBLISHED FOR
Alberta Regional Council of Carpenters & Allied Workers 15210 – 123 Avenue Edmonton, Alberta T5V 0A3 Tel: (780) 474-8599 / Fax: (780) 474-8910 www.albertacarpenters.com
Summer 14
FEATURES
10 Game On With the UBC’s 300-hitter program in Las Vegas, today’s masters initiate tomorrow’s leaders By Robbie Jeffrey
PUBLISHED BY
Venture Publishing Inc. 10259 – 105 Street Edmonton, Alberta T5J 1E3 Toll-free: 1-866-227-4276 Phone: (780) 990-0839 Fax: (780) 425-4921 www.venturepublishing.ca PUBLISHER
Ruth Kelly
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Hitting the Strip Annual Vegas training trip to UBC’s International Training Center is far from a gamble for third-year apprentices from all over the continent By David DiCenzo
14 On the Links Annual golf tournament a swinging success
ARCCAW EDITOR
Martyn A. Piper
DIRECTOR OF CUSTOM CONTENT
Mifi Purvis
18 Alberta Carpenter/Scaffolder Competition Edmonton Locals carve out top spots
EDITOR
Shelley Williamson ART DIRECTOR
Drytec Interiors regains market share by proving the veracity of union ideals By Robbie Jeffrey
Charles Burke
ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR
Andrea deBoer
ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR
Colin Spence
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
Betty Feniak Smith
DEPARTMENTS
4
Note from the Executive Secretary Treasurer
PRODUCTION TECHNICIANS
Brent Felzien, Brandon Hoover
By Martyn Piper
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
David DiCenzo, Robbie Jeffrey, Erica Viegas CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ILLUSTRATORS
Christy Dean, Buffy Goodman, David Marino, Romy Young VICE-PRESIDENT, SALES
27
20 It’s What’s on the Inside
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Site Lines
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New Calgary administrative building; Skills Canada Try a Trade; Scaffolding designation survey; Local 1325 summer picnic; Honouring 1460 retirees; and more
Anita McGillis
ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE
Kathy Kelley
24 Geared Up Tools to help you work smarter, not harder
SALES ASSISTANT
Julia Ehli
Contents © 2014 by ARCCAW Inc. No part of this publication should be reproduced without written permission.
25 KidZone 26 Meet the Instructor 27 Meet the Apprentice
Important Phone Numbers Edmonton 780-471-3200 Fort McMurray 780-743-1442 Calgary 403-283-0747 Carpenters Training Centre 780-455-6532 Carpenters Health and Welfare 780-477-9131 Carpenters Pension 780-477-9131 Industrial Workers 403-283-0747 Millwright Local 1460 780-430-1460 Local Union 1325 and 2103 Dispatch 1-888-944-0818
28 Training & Apprenticeship Report By Len Bryden
29 Local 1460 Millwrights Report By Bob Hugh
30 Parting Shot 31 Training & Events; In Memoriam
ON THE COVER: Drytec’s Victor Pereira is a union friend PHOTO: Christy Dean SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Site Lines
News in Brief
A roundup of news and events from around the region
Summer Fun for Everyone
BEFORE
It’s that time of year again: a day to put away your safety gear and tools and gather the family for the annual Local 1325 summer picnic at Edmonton’s Alberta Carpenters Training Centre, northeast parking lot (15210- 123 Avenue). This year’s festivities, slated for August 10, will include face painting, magicians, clowns, two bouncy castles, a baseball toss, hockey shootout and more. It’s a great opportunity to grab a hotdog or burger and catch up with your fellow union members.
Scaffolder Occupation Fails to Net Support AFTER The results are in from a third-party web-based survey of stakeholders in Alberta as to whether support exists for making scaffolding a designated occupation under the Apprenticeship and Industry Training Act. The Alberta Apprenticeship and Industry Training Board recommended this designation, and participation in it is voluntary. Of the more than 1,000 employees polled in the Banister Research and Consulting poll completed in November 2013, just 20 per cent said the designation would have a positive impact on Alberta’s industry, and 75 per cent reported it would have a negative impact. Meanwhile, twofifths of the 73 employers (43 per cent) saw a scaffolding designation as positive, versus 49 per cent who said it would negatively affect the industry. Just 21 per cent of employees and 47 per cent of employers said they would support scaffolding as a designated occupation, while 90 per cent of polled project owners said they supported the proposed designation. The poll revealed that most were concerned with safety and training. Employees also reported on the potential for negative or positive impacts of the proposed designation. Of the 75 per cent who said it would have a negative impact, most (59 per cent) cited a need for certification and qualifications, while 37 per cent reported the designation would negatively affect work and safety. Just 21 per cent said they would support changes to the act and 79 per cent said they’d oppose. Martyn Piper, executive secretary treasurer of the Alberta Regional Council of Carpenters and Allied Workers, says the survey indicates that “at the end of the day there is no broad base support for scaffolding as an occupation, but there was some support in the industry for some sort of designation.” Piper says the industry is in a “period of contemplation” and next steps will include considering what the union supports, if not a designated occupation status for scaffolders.
The End of an Era Members in southern Alberta have bid adieu to their long-time home base on 10 Street NW, now that the new administrative building is complete in northeast Calgary. Martyn Piper, ARCCAW’s executive secretary treasurer, says the Kensington digs are long past their due date for the growing union membership. He welcomes the move. The new 12,000-square-foot “unique and contemporary designed” address is intended to complement the Provincial Training and Administration Centre in Edmonton, complete with the same iconic “pipes” built into the exterior design. Along with more space, the new building contains a hall for membership meetings and spacey and well-functioning offices in a location with easy access to both the Calgary International Airport, Deerfoot Trail and transit. SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Site Lines
News in Brief
A roundup of news and events from around the region
Robert Provencher Bursary Trust Fund Application Carpenter’s Local 1325 - Year 2014 Applications are available For a list of the application rules and requirements and the complete application please visit our web page: www.albertacarpenters.com Applications are also available at the LU1325 Offices Edmonton 133, 15210-123 Avenue Edmonton, AB T5V 0A3 Ph: (780) 733-2160 Fax: (780) 477-7143 Fort McMurray #165, 101 Signal Road Fort McMurray, AB T9H 4N6 Ph: (780) 743-1442 Deadline for Application: August 31, 2014 Inquiries to: Diana Stubbard at (780) 733-2160 dstubbard@albertacarpenters.com
Students Try a Trade on for Size For the fifth year in a row, the Alberta Carpenters Training Centre hosted its popular Try A Trade booth for carpentry at the Edmonton EXPO Centre, this year on May 14 and 15. The booth gave students from elementary school to post-secondary the opportunity to cut and shape a piece of wood, to try carpentry on for size as a future profession. “We have thousands of young people come through every year,” says
www.isafety.ca
Len Bryden, director of training and apprenticeship at the Alberta Carpenters Training Centre. “We believe it’s very important. Every chance we get, we promote the trade and the future of the trade of carpentry. This is the one big thing that the training centre does every year.” Bryden adds that the idea behind the interactive booth is to expose young people to carpentry from a young age.
• OSSA Training • Consulting • On Site Training • Auditing • On Site Safety Services • Sales and Rentals • Standard First Aid • Rope Rescue (High Angle) • Online Courses • Zoomboom/Forklift
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info@isafety.ca (855) 667-2338 (780) 756-9 1 9 1 (855) 667-2339 #217, 10807 Castledowns Road Edmonton, AB T5X 3N7
The Real Deal
When it comes to the Journeyman scaffolder Real Bourgeois (pictured
health of your employees…
above, centre) deserves a pat on the back for his efforts to protect his fellow workers – and he got one in the form of a Pride Coin from his employer, Safway Group. In May, while at work at Shell Albian in Fort McMurray, he noticed in a pre-assessment that the bell end of an exchanger suspended overhead was too close to the work area to safely install a scaffold deck. He let his supervisor know and the job was put on hold until the overhead hazard was secured. Great job, Real!
it’s important to have a plan.
A Tribute to Retirees
Call us today for a confidential, no-obligation quote or talk to your plan advisor.
On June 3, 2014 Millwrights Local 1460 hosted the Ninth Annual Retirees’ Social at the Chateau Nova Kingsway in Edmonton. More than 80 retired members and their spouses and companions were in attendance. Special thanks to Guy Dunand for helping to co-ordinate the social.
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Edmonton 780-498-8500 Calgary 403-294-4004 Lethbridge 403-328-6081 Medicine Hat 403-529-5550 Grande Prairie 780-532-3507 Red Deer 403-347-7999 Toll free 1-866-513-2555
www.ab.bluecross.ca/group Prescription Drugs • Dental • Life and Disability Vision • Travel Coverage • Critical Illness Spending Accounts • Extended Health Employee and Family Assistance Program ABC 83188 2014/01
Alberta Blue Cross 2014 Hardhat 1/2 pg vertical/ full colour Trim Size: 3.625” x 9.875” RUN Summer Winter
Game On With the UBC’s 300-hitter program in Las Vegas, today’s masters initiate tomorrow’s leaders By ROBBIE JEFFREY
I
n professional baseball, a .300 hitter the distinction
can make an all-star out of a junior. Batting .300 in a season – hitting 300 of every 1,000 pitches – is a benchmark. Hitters in the .298 or .299 range are so determined to make it into the .300 hitters club that no .299 batter in the last 25 years has ever walked during their final plate appearance of the season. This is the kind of person the United Brotherhood of Carpenters wants in its own “300-hitter program” at the International Training Center in Las Vegas. Not baseball players, of course, but the journeymen most fit to lead the new roster of UBC-bred labour. This is the second year of the journeyman 300-hitter program, which has already trained several thousand UBC members. Martyn Piper, executive secretary-treasurer of the Alberta Regional Council of Carpenters and Allied Workers (ARCCAW), and staff were tasked with selecting 150 journeymen he considered to be “heavy hitters” in their field. “The program is intended to focus on those journeymen who have the ability and the willingness to influence others, who are skilled, productive and respected among their fellow members,” Piper says. “They’re future leaders for our contractors and our union,” he elaborates. “By strengthening their leadership skills, we’ll ensure a stronger future for our members and their employers.” Randy O’Connell, a 30-year-old journeyman carpenter, was selected for the program. As he entered the facility, he was astounded. “It was incredible,” he says. “There was underwater welding for welders, retractable roofs for scaffolders, all kinds of stuff.” At nearly a million square feet, the ITC is a sprawling complex of shops, conference spaces, classrooms, dining facilities and guest rooms. The ITC is a
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brisk 15-minute drive from Caesar’s Palace and the Bellagio, but the journeymen faced a party-prohibitive regimen. After touching down in Nevada on Thursday, O’Connell began the program immediately and was in class from 7 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. every day until Sunday. He boarded another plane home right after his last class. With content developed by the UBC’s Department of Education & Training, the classes are taught by people who might counsel Fortune 500 companies. “We have people on our end that are academics, PhDs and so on, developing leadership courses like the 300-hitter program which elevate the individuals in the organization and add value,” Piper says. The program discussed UBC priorities and communication models, rights and responsibilities and how to influence, motivate and mentor. “A lot of it was about how to be professional and how the right kind of communication can make or break a job,” O’Connell says. “With the competition that’s out there, we have to be the best.” The program also discussed strategies for acquiring market share and the crucial role of feedback and constructive criticism. Those selected for the 300-hitter program were chosen for their exceptional leadership skills, and the program aimed to refine and develop those traits so journeymen like O’Connell could return home with a fresh outlook on their roles as mentors and members of the Brotherhood. “I always had an idea of what it takes to be a good worker and leader,” O’Connell says, “but the 300-hitter program just made it clearer that it can affect a lot of issues down the chain. The big thing is you give everybody a fair chance, and you communicate well with them and treat them as an equal. You have to be that way yourself; you can’t just say the words. If you don’t believe in it, other people won’t.”
Hitting the Strip Annual Vegas training trip to UBC’s International Training Center is far from a gamble for third-year apprentices from all over Canada By DAVID DICENZO | Photography by ROMY YOUNG SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Z
enobia Barbeau never set
out to become a millwright. The 25-year-old Calgary native was a NAIT student looking to go into nursing when a she took a job in the summer of 2009 that would prove to be life-altering. Barbeau landed a seasonal gig at a landscaping and loading company, doing various tasks, including running a Bobcat. “My boss told me I was really mechanically inclined,” says Barbeau, now an apprentice. “He gave me a contact for a millwright shop. I really love it. I would never want to change my career path now.” Barbeau represents a growing number of female tradespeople throughout the industry, and opportunities for skilled workers like her have continued to crop up. This past April, she was among a group of 24 third-year carpenter, scaffolding and millwright apprentices from Alberta who travelled to Las Vegas for INDUSTRY INSIDERS: Two dozen third-year apprentices got a four-day look at Brotherhood and the industry. a four-day course titled “Helping Build Our Industries.” Apprentices from all across North America attend the annual event, setting up shop at the United Brotherhood of Carpenters’ aspects of the trip. The information he took in over the four days of the state-of-the-art International Training Center. The facility has 280 course has been invaluable for his future. single rooms to house attendees and an incredible variety of class“We spread out into groups of 30 or so and learned about ways to rooms and equipment used for training purposes – including a pile gain more market share, as well as the history of our union,” he says. driver pit, turbine pit, monorails, and scaffolding mockups. “The training entailed how to take care of our contractors, as well “It’s an amazing facility,” says Barbeau. “I’ve never seen anything as looking at what’s in it for me,” adds Sullivan. “We discussed produclike it. It’s gigantic with as big a shop as I have ever seen.” But working tivity, what is it and how can we as tradespeople be more productive. on the high-end equipment and improving their skills was only part of There was a panel with contractors from all over Canada. “The the experience for the 24 Alberta apprentices. The other part is the soft teachers were great and very knowledgeable. I learned what needs to skills they gleaned from their time in Vegas. The students that have been be done to get more market share and how I can be the best carpenter attending the course for the past five years also gain useful insight into I can be.” their industry as a whole, with a bigger picture perspective. In addition to raising awareness of and promoting the union, “The apprentices are there to get a better understanding of the apprentices also learned about business practices from the perspecBrotherhood of the industry and the important part that each of them tive of employers, contractors and tradespeople. Emphasis on both plays in the success of the union, contractors and the industry at cooperation and having the right attitude were two prevalent themes large,” says Martyn Piper, executive secretary treasurer of the Alberta throughout the course. “The trainers were so positive,” says Barbeau, Regional Council of Carpenters and Allied Workers. “They are young. suggesting the approach has had a lasting impact on the apprentices in They learn about attitude and being a attendance. “They just loved their jobs and participatory member of the union. They were so into it. It rubs off. It was such a “The teachers were great and are getting the chance to find out ‘what’s good program.” very knowledgeable. I learned in it for me’ – and how to be role models.” There is, of course, the inherent risk of Greg Sullivan says that the Vegas sending a bunch of young people from every what needs to be done to get more training is something third-year corner of North America to Sin City. But market share and how I can be the apprentices eagerly anticipate. Sullivan, Piper says that the legendary lure of Vegas best carpenter I can be.” a 30-year-old from Spruce Grove, started really isn’t an issue. Any apprentice who fails doing hardwood flooring and finishing to make it to a scheduled component of the work with his dad when he was just 16. He spent over 10 years working course is sent home – at his or her own expense. He says that it has never for non-union companies before joining so that he could “build his happened. They are there to learn and that’s exactly what they do. skills while making good money,” which is proving to be a good choice That doesn’t mean the apprentices can’t have a little fun along the as his own family grows. way. And in Las Vegas, that can mean consumption of fantastic food. Sullivan calls the full tour of the facility one of the most enjoyable Barbeau says she will remember two things from her experience – the 12
HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
PHOTO COURTESY ARCCAW
LUCKY BREAK: Millwright apprentice Zenobia Barbeau and carpentry apprentice Greg Sullivan found their recent training trip to ITC in Las Vegas with fellow third-years to be win-win.
teachers and the sushi. (Three, if you include the shopping.) The International Training Center is known for its magnificent facilities and equipment, but staff spare no expense when feeding the apprentices, especially with the decadent sushi buffet. “It was probably the best sushi I’ve ever had in my life,” says Barbeau. “I was so surprised that a place meant for training had such a great chef. It was fancy and beautiful.” Sullivan opted for some heartier fare when he had the opportunity. “One night after being on the Strip for a while, we came back and realized we could build our own sandwiches,” he says. “A friend and I made the biggest sandwich I think I’ve ever seen in my life.” Good food and meeting like-minded apprentices from across Canada will be a cherished part of the experience for the group from Alberta. The course was both intense and enlightening. But what they
really come away with is knowledge and that will prove most valuable as they embark on careers in a growing industry. “There is still a big demand for most trades across Alberta,” says Piper. “And the union is a big, diverse operation with 12,500 members and growing. These apprentices will gain a sense of belonging and what it’s like to be part of such a large organization. They are proud, confident, empowered and enthused. “They come back from an experience like this and they spread the word. They know what role they can now play and how they fit in.” With the “Helping Build Our Industries” course in their rear-view mirror, Alberta’s third-year apprentices have clearly learned something contrary to what most believe about that famed city in the desert. So it turns out what happens in Vegas doesn’t necessarily stay in Vegas. SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Bringing on new retailers is our on-going commitment to serving you better. Learn where you can save on our newly launched Boom website! That’s right, we are very excited to announce that we have changed our name from Social Club Discount Listing to Boom. All activated SCDL ARCCAW membership cards are still valid at our Boom Retailers. Before you make a small purchase or a big one, check our website first and don’t forget to look for our Boom logo at participating retailers.
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Legendary Day On the Links
Brandi Thorne, ladies’ longest putt
The Alberta Regional Council of carpenters and Allied Workers hit the Legends Golf & Country Club greens once again on July 18 for the 14th annual Barrie Regan Golf Tournament. Here are a few snaps of some of the day’s winners who came out to support the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF). Winners are pictured below with their prizes. Tony Barnard, men’s longest drive
Brandon Ellement, men’s longest putt
Lindsay Jacobs, ladies’ longest drive
Martyn Piper, left, with the winning team: Tom Ross, Tom Manca, Gary Picott, Darren Hewlitt
SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Alberta Carpenter/ Scaffolder Competition Members of Local 1325 got to show what they are made of at the annual Provincial Carpentry and Scaffolder Competition on July 11. The Alberta Carpenters Training Centre in Edmonton hosted the all-day event, which saw competitors vie for bragging rights and a trip to Toronto for the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America National Apprenticeship Contest in August. Chad Gerrits of Local 1325 was at the top of his game, taking first place for Carpentry in the provincials. Next, Gerrits will vie for the top spot in Canada at the national contest August 21 and 22 in Toronto. He was joined on the podium by fellow members of 1325, Philip Shaw, who placed second, and Marc Mayrand, who took third place. Runners-up were Martin Echter of Local 2103 from Calgary, and Aaron Freker and Kaleb Zilke of Local 1325. Local 1325 also staked its claim on the scaffolding branch of the contest, taking the first six spots in the competition. Christy Ennett took top prize, followed by Collin Jellinson in second, Ryan Nicholson in third, and runners-up Colton Kopp, Fred McDonald, and Tony Nicolson.
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IN GOOD COMPANY: The competitors square off for a group shot.
TOP SHELF: Christy Ennett, first-place scaffolder is all smiles post-competition.
SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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INDUSTRY FIXTURE: Victor Pereira of Drytec Interiors is well known for his work ethic and union loyalty.
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It’s What’s on the Inside Drytec Interiors regains market share by demonstrating the truth of union ideals By ROBBIE JEFFREY | Photography by CHRISTY DEAN
V
ictor Pereira is a great among greats
in an industry with an exceptionally high bar for distinction. When Martyn Piper, executive secretary treasurer of the Alberta Regional Council of Carpenters and Allied Workers (ARCCAW), calls you a “fixture in the industry,” you have the licence to speak highly of yourself. Pereira, however, radiates modesty. The owner and founder of Drytec Interiors, whose Portuguese background underscores his gratitude for his employees, hasn’t had the time to let praise go to his head. From its founding in 2011, Drytec Interiors stood out as one of Alberta’s few union interior systems companies specializing in design-assist and construction services. You don’t win points for simply showing up, though. “Pereira attracts good people,” Piper says. “He’s an empowering guy, who works extremely hard and understands the nuances of being a union contractor but still competing out there in the marketplace.” In 2012, Bob Hugh, senior business representative for millwrights in Local 1460, told Hard Hat “our greatest edge in fighting the market share battle against non-union labour is the excellence of our work and the consistency with which we perform it. If our contractors and the owners they
work for see us as true trade professionals … and if we perform on time or better, on or under budget, then they will want to hire us again.” Drytec was around for barely a year then, but it proved to have these qualities. The company keeps excellent timelines; it commonly finishes projects a month or two in advance and recently completed work for boilermakers three months ahead of schedule. To understand why Drytec Interiors is held in such high regard, you have to consider the context from which it arose. “Up until about 1983 or 1984, ARCCAW probably had 80 per cent of the interior systems drywall market in this province,” Piper says. “Because of the events of the early 1980s, a number of companies went out of business and we’ve never recovered that market share.” After the recession of 1981, Alberta witnessed the most militant decade in its labour history. “The problem with the 1980s was that people lost confidence in unions and their projects,” Pereira says. “Everybody lost a lot of work.” A reputation built from years of SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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HANDS ON: Victor Pereira hopes to prove by doing that union employees can do work better and faster.
dedication can be toppled with one fell swoop, and the return to paradise company has expanded from drywall, insulation and piping to include is an uphill battle. Drytec Interiors, however, gladly led the charge. painting and flooring, and currently boasts more than 40 employees Drytec wasn’t expected to grow so quickly. Bob Provencher, Project and two offices. Pereira says he has contracts up until the end of 2016. Manager for ARCC Corporation gave Pereira his first job in 2011, and “The more work he can attract by quality workmanship, reliability, after working as a journeyman interior systems mechanic, he saw an productivity, safety, and all those things that count when you bid jobs opportunity. “I saw the chance to go on my own, and I took a risk,” he to clients, that will in turn drive more market share for [ARCCAW],” says. And Piper remembers says Piper, emphasizing how cruSince 2012, the company has expanded from cial a task it is. “Victor is part of when Drytec first sprang onto the scene. “Three years ago, we the resurgence in beginning the drywall, insulation and piping to include were doing some work on the journey back to recovering painting and flooring, and currently boasts long [ARCCAW] building. He already market share.” more than 40 employees and two offices. had a company, and he decided Pereira’s concerns are more to turn that company union immediate. “When you are a and hire a lot more people.” Pereira’s journeyman background served union member, you always have the proper training,” he says. Union him well; the skills he internalized are also the traits for which Drytec employees are trained to have a comprehensive perspective of the Interiors is known today. trade, he explains, noting non-union companies train their employThere is no single formula for running a successful union operation, ees to do one thing, and one thing only. “They couldn’t pay union but Pereira makes it look easy. “I’ll be honest, it’s a whole bunch of reasons wages to people who just do one thing, so instead of training people altogether,” he says when asked about his accomplishments. “But if and educating them, they decide it’s better to get cheaper labour.” somebody calls you and you’re there, and if someone trusts you and if you Pereira knows what Drytec is up against; his goal is to prove to cusmeet the needs they have and can keep on schedule, that’s very important tomers that union employees can do it better and faster. Pereira is for the project.” Pereira claims that Drytec performs so well because of an too modest to say it, but Drytec Interiors backs up the eternal values effective management style that puts his employees first. Since 2012, the of the brotherhood with real-world proof. 22
HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
Construction Moving Ahead Crews from Ellis Don are hard at work at the Eastern Alberta Transmission Line in Brooks, Alberta. The $1.8 billion transmission line project, which will run from Brooks to Gibbons-Redwater, is an excellent example of how the union and industry partners can work together.
Ellis Don project crew and management at the Brooks substation
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Geared Up
By ALLISON MYGGLAND
Work smarter, not harder CUT THE CORD
TOUGH TUNES
Dewalt has released the world’s first 20V MAX battery powered, dual-speed cordless framing nailer with extreme runtime. Able to work in any weather conditions, unlike its gas-powered counterparts, the (DCN692) features several settings for speed and firing rate and the nail depth can be adjusted for optimal use. With lithium ion battery packs, expect to see a charge fire up to 700 nails. The DCN692 also accepts a variety of paper-tape collated nails, which makes this tool adaptable to your job site. The new gas-free and dual-speed cordless framing nailer is available both kitted (DCN692M1) with a Dewalt XR 20V MAX 4.0AH lithium ion battery pack, and as a bare tool (DCN692B), and retail for $579 and $459, respectively. For more information visit: www.dewalt.com.
You need a radio that will stand up to the tough conditions of any job site. The Dewalt DCR018 Compact Worksite Radio is that device. Built with a heavy duty design and a roll cage, it’s portable and can be powered by either a Dewalt power tool battery, via USB cable, or by using the attached AC/DC power cord. You can also plug in your favourite digital audio device using the 3.5 mm auxiliary input and keep your electronic devices protected when stored in the built-in device storage box.
BITS WITH BITE A new line of FlexTorq screw-driving bits from Dewalt allows users to take advantage of 15 degrees of flexibility, making them perfect for jobs in tight corners or at awkward angles. The FlexTorq bits include the innovative 10X Magnetic Screw Lock System, which features a new rapid load holder that is compatible with all one-inch bits and promises to minimize drops and reduce wobbling by locking the fastener in place on the bit tip with the powerful magnet. The FlexTorq screw-driving bits and 10X Magnetic Screw Lock System were released this spring and are available anywhere Dewalt products are sold. 24
HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
CLAMP YOUR STYLE The Stanley 2x4 Clamp promises to be your go-to alternative to bar and pipe clamps. Working like another set of steady hands, this clamp grips any two-by-four and provides 400 pounds of clamping force – or up to 1,000 pounds when bolted to a two-by-four. Engineered to be strong enough for any job and gentle enough to prevent nicks and gouges from marring expensive finishes the 2x4 Clamp is equipped with specially designed mar-pads and is lightweight and easy to transport. The clamp is available for $24.99 at home improvement centres across Canada. For more information visit: www.stanleytools.com.
Kid Zone ACROSS
DOWN
2 the four sides of a room
1 useful for punding 3 useful for cutting
4 useful for making holes in wood
4 overlaps and covers the roof
8 hit these with a hammer
5 7 you can climb up this
12 the top of a building
9 dump _ _ _ _ _
13 its cables lift heavy objects
10 the base on which a building stands
15
11 useful for holding two pieces of wood together
17 hard _ _ _ 18 wood sawed into boards
14 _ _ _ _ _ _ truck
19 a coat that protects and colours
16 _ _ _ _ _ _ mixer
20 a step on a ladder
Construction Crossword
1 2
3
5
4
Word Scramble 1. ECOTNCRE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
6
7
8
9
10 11
12
13
14
2. LDLRYWA
_______
3. RASNED
______
4. HRAMME
______
5. DRALDE
______
6. FLFSDACO
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
7. RRSERCEIVWD _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
15 16
8. ZOEBRLLDU 17
9. NECMET RMEIX _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 10. VLLEE
18
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _
ANSWERS
20
1. concrete, 2. drywall, 3. sander, 4. hammer, 5. ladder, 6. scaffold, 7. screwdriver, 8. bulldozer, 9. cement mixer 10. level
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SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT 25
Meet the Instructor
By ERICA VIEGAS
Mentoring the Next Generation
D
avid Robinson remembers visiting the
millwright union hall as a young boy with his dad. Then, he wasn’t sure if he would ever learn a trade or follow in the family footsteps. Now, after 26 years as a journeyman millwright, he’s back in the hall – shaping a new generation of millwright apprentices. Growing up on a farm, Robinson spent his days working the land with his father. A high school graduate at 16, Robinson’s evenings were spent pumping gas and thinking about the future. His father, also a member of Local 1460 Alberta Millwrights, mentioned an opening for a millwright apprentice. He stressed that after the four years of training, a journeyman ticket could never be lost. For Robinson, an obvious selling point was working alongside his dad again and training with a man who already understood him.
draws from his time in the field. Skills taught to him are passed along to students. “We support each other. Millwrights know that apprentices will teach the next generation of workers,” he explains. Robinson also enjoys the variety in his role. “You are a jack of all trades. You teach a little bit of electrical, pipefitting, refrigeration, math, blueprints – enough to be dangerous at everything,” he says with a smile. And Robinson’s father, now a 38-year union member, still visits and helps at the hall. “I pass on a lot of what he has taught me,” says Robinson.
“We support each other. Millwrights know that apprentices will teach the next generation of workers.”
PHOTO: BUFFY GOODMAN
But Robinson stuck with the trade past the four years, and he hasn’t looked back. “It was a good fit. I had the strength to work and the journeymen had the knowledge and patience to teach me,” he says. After 26 years of field work, including a nine-year maintenance position with Capital Power, Robinson got an appealing offer. “I’m always looking for new ways to keep myself marketable. Some of my other tickets were expiring and I went back to the hall for training. They offered me a chance to instruct,” he says. Since February, Robinson has embraced his instructing role and the chance to reconnect with members of the Local 1460 Alberta Millwrights hall. The hall pays union dues to the Millwrights Training Trust Fund in Edmonton, but operates its own programming and courses. Its “train the trainer” courses all run out of the $67.6-million United Brotherhood of Carpenters (UBC) International Training Center in Las Vegas, where Robinson will travel about six times in the next year. Robinson and his colleagues often develop new training courses if they see an unmet need. “If you are willing to learn, I’m willing to teach,” says Robinson. While instructing, he also
DAVID ROBINSON 26
HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
Meet the Apprentice
By ERICA VIEGAS
Following Family Footsteps
I
t’s not always easy to leave the town where you
grew up, especially when 146 of your relatives live there. So when Alex Marino decided to become a millwright apprentice earlier this year, the 16-hour drive from his hometown of Kamloops to his first job in Fort McMurray, for Clearwater Energy Services, was nerve-racking. But he wasn’t leaving all of his support behind. His uncle, a millwright supervisor at the site, was the one who convinced Marino to give the apprenticeship a try. “He kept saying it was the type of work that gave you tons of opportunity – to travel, make a great living and learn endless new things,” says Marino, 24. “I was at a point where I wanted to try something new.” Growing up, Marino loved working with his hands. His father was a carpenter and the two often built sheds and home projects together. After high school, Marino quickly secured a carpentry job at Custom Trailer, where his dad worked. But after six years there, dreams of travel flooded his mind, as did his uncle’s promises of a career that offered more flexibility.
With such enthusiasm, Marino has been spreading the word. A few of his friends and cousins have already joined him in apprenticing. But even with the company, there are things he misses about home. “I’m Italian. At home everyone is cooking all the time. We have these big family meals. The pasta on site is nowhere near as good as my mom’s,” Marino says. When asked where he most hopes the job will take him, he is quick to answer: Italy.
“I wish I had decided to do this sooner. I choose when I want to work, and I’m learning so much from the journeymen training me.”
PHOTO: DAVID MARINO
So he took a leap of faith. In the last year, much of his millwright training has been through the Millwrights Training Trust Fund and the Millwrights Training Centre, which partners with the Local 1460 Millwrights union in Edmonton to offer specialized trade courses. For Marino, the extra training is a step closer to earning his journeyman millwright ticket. “When I first heard of the centre, I didn’t understand why I needed to take those extra courses. But they teach you with one-on-one training. I went there for two days and I knew so many things that I surprised the guys back at work,” he says. Marino says he’s learned more in one year as an apprentice than ever before. He has developed skills in math, precision work, mining knowledge, pump repair and pipe fitting, to name a few. And his uncle’s promise of greater job flexibility has been delivered. Because Marino choose to work long contracts for most of the year, he can now enjoy most of his summer work-free, in a new home he recently purchased back in Kamloops. “I wish I had decided to do this sooner. I choose when I want to work, and I’m learning so much from the journeymen training me.”
ALEX MARINO SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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REPORT
Training and Apprenticeship
The Season for Training
S
ummer is upon us and this always means one thing: time to
make hay while the sun shines. With our training centres at capacity, we have added more scaffold training classes in Edmonton to help us train more members. We are still having issues with filling our Carpenter Period 1 and 2 classes in Edmonton, but I hope to see this change in the fall through more advertising targeting not just members, but also the general public. All of our programs are industry leaders in their curriculum and delivery. Visit www.abcarptc.ab.ca and click on “courses” to see what is being offered at each location. And as usual, I remind everyone to keep their safety training certifications current, so dispatch or job statuses are not affected or put on hold. You may have received a plastic card in the mail, with a Quick Response or QR code on it recently. This is a UBCJA training verification (TVC), which is linked to our international TRAIN database. For the past few years, we have been entering training data for members that will show up on any smartphone or device that can read the QR Code. This will help eliminate the many cards and certifications needed to show to contractors, and in time, make things easier to quickly verify a member’s training. TRAIN database specialists are currently entering all data now on file for members, but this will take some time with our large membership. In the meantime, I encourage you to make sure the Alberta Carpenters Training Centre in Edmonton has all your current training records from within and outside of the ACTC. This is just another example of the benefits of membership, and the forward-thinking of this international organization. I was able to attend a portion of the first 150-member journeyman 300-hitter program at our International Training Center (ITC) in Las Vegas recently. Including networking for members, learning more about what the UBC has to offer, workshops on leadership and communication and more, it’s a great program. This latest instalment was well received and enjoyed by members lucky enough to attend. If you are interested in attending an upcoming session, contact your union representative by attending your Local’s meetings, and make sure you are on the member email list to receive updates on opportunities, events and major announcements. Our annual Alberta Provincial Apprenticeship Contest was held July 11-12 this year at our Edmonton shops. Six carpenters and six scaffolders went head-to-head, competing for cash, prizes and, of course, bragging rights. Our carpenter winner nets a trip to Toronto in August to compete in the National UBC Apprenticeship Contest, where carpenters, millwrights, drywallers and floor layers will compete in their respective trades for the ultimate win. This is also the time when training directors, coordinators, trustees and staff from across Canada meet for two days to discuss national issues. I will be there with my counterparts, working to ensure continued work on standardization of training, whether for skills or safety of our members. We continue to work hard and strive for the best for all UBC members. For more on the Apprenticeship Contest, see page 18. Enjoy the relatively short, but beautiful, Alberta summer and be safe in your work and your off-work life!
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HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
Len J. Bryden, Director of Training and Apprenticeship Alberta Carpenters Training Centre lbryden@abcarptc.ab.ca
REPORT
Local 1460 Millwrights
New Health Benefits System
J
uly 1 marked the advent of significant changes to the Millwrights
Local 1460 health and welfare plan. Your board of trustees has made every effort to minimize eligibility disruptions, by overlapping the new and old qualification rules for existing members for a period of six months, from July 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014. While we understand change can be uncomfortable, your trustees believe the new plan will provide a welcome measure of freedom to all members, empowering each to chart his or her own benefits eligibility course. When the benefit plan was established in 1968, it was designed to use an eligibility system known as the Brotherhood system, which required millwrights to work a significant number of hours with participating employers before qualifying for benefits. Once millwrights completed their qualifying hours, they became part of the Brotherhood System, and benefits continued uninterrupted – as long as they regularly took dispatch jobs in the unionized millwright industry. That system of benefit eligibility operated reasonably well, but failed to keep pace with union members’ desires for greater work-life balance. The trustees concluded that it was time to empower members to take control of their benefit eligibility, by replacing the outdated Brotherhood system with an hour bank system. An hour bank is like a bank account, but it holds a record of hours worked instead of dollars. The change will allow members to control their eligibility, by allowing them to replenish or withdraw from hour banks, based on their own work patterns. The hours worked for participating employers are deposited into an hour bank in a member’s name. Hours are automatically deducted from it to pay for his or her benefit coverage. Those who qualified as a plan member under the old Brotherhood system will see their benefits continue uninterrupted under the new hour bank system. For each existing plan member, 720 hours will be deposited in his or her hour bank, a quantity sufficient to ensure eligibility for six months of coverage, from July 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014. Since 120 hours are deducted per one month of benefit coverage, 720 stored hours is equivalent to six months of future coverage. Those who work more hours than are needed for immediate coverage can store up to 720 additional hours in their hour banks. Plan members with fewer than 120 hours stored in their hour banks can make self-payments to continue coverage. The monthly self-payment is $240.
Bob Hugh, Senior Business Representative Local 1460 Millwrights
For a copy of the eligibility booklet, visit albertamillwrights.com or contact: Plan Administrator Millwrights Health and Welfare Plan Suite 101, 2635 – 37 Avenue N.E. Calgary, Alberta T1Y 5Z6 Toll-free: 1-888-525-1460 Email: mw1460@pbas.ca Fax: 1-403-250-9236
SUMMER 2014 | HARDHAT
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Parting Shot
Windmills and Tradition
Pictured from the third level of an operating windmill in Holland, Michigan, this parting shot features Jan Diederik “Diek” Medendorp, a third-generation millwright and miller inspecting some wheat before grinding. (Medendorp died in January of 2011 at age 89 in Zuidlaren, the Netherlands.) In this type of windmill, the grain flows from the bottom of the hopper to the centre of the millstones. As the millstones rotate, the flour emerges from the circumference of the circular stones and drops through a chute, to bins on the lower floor. According to Dutch tradition, the positioning of blades of a windmill can communicate both joy and mourning. To show joy – such as the celebration of a wedding, a birth or other special event – the blade is stopped just before it reaches its highest, or vertical, position. Mourning is demonstrated by fixing the windmill’s upper sail after the blade has passed its highest position, or to the left going counter-clockwise.
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HARDHAT | SUMMER 2014
UPCOMING
Training + Events
MEETINGS First Wednesday of each month: Local 1325 meeting Third Thursday of each month: Local 2103 meeting Fourth Tuesday of each month: Local 1460 meeting TRAINING Alberta Carpenters Training Centre The following is a sample of training courses that are open for registration at the time of publication of this edition of Hard Hat. For full listing or more information on training courses, visit abcarptc. ab.ca or phone the Edmonton office at 780-455-6532 or toll-free at 1-877-455-6532. All courses are at the Edmonton location unless otherwise indicated. Aerial Work Platform: August 7 to 8, 2014 August 20 to 21, 2014 Period Two Carpentry: August 18- October 10, 2014 Forklift / Zoom Boom (Power Industrial Truck Operator): August 5 to 6, 2014 August 18 to 19, 2014 Scaffolding Journeyman Upgrade: August 11 to September 12, 2014
Scaffolding Level One: September 2 to 19, 2014 September 15 to Oct 3, 2014 October 6 to Oct 24, 2014 Scaffolding Level Two: September 2 to 19, 2014 September 15 to October 3, 2014 October 14 to October 31, 2014 MILLWRIGHTS TRAINING CENTRE Visit www.albertamillwrights.com for a current listing of training courses available. NOTICE OF NOMINATIONS AND ELECTIONS For offices of the Alberta Regional Council of Carpenters and Allied Workers (ARCCAW): When: Saturday, September 6, 2014 at 10 a.m. Where: Chateau Louie Hotel & Conference Centre, 11727 Kingsway NW, Edmonton
In Memoriam ARCCAW notes with sorrow the passing of the following members.
LOCAL 1325 Richard Cooreman March 30, 2014 Age 58 Gabriel Giroux April 11, 2014 Age 84 Robert Marvin Haynes May 11, 2014 Age 61 Bryne MacArthur May 20, 2014 Age 60 Sheldon Tulk May 22, 2014 Age 25 Richard Wood June 10, 2014 Age 46 Raymond Chartrand March 14, 2014 Age 70 Joe Tatarin February 25, 2014 Age 48 Manuel Jose Verde March 2, 2014 Age 62 LOCAL 1460 Terrence Lynn Bell March 3, 2014 Age 65 Clarence Edstrom May 24, 2014 Age 69 Danique Huberdeau April 30, 2014 Age 19 John Patrick McCartan May 10, 2014 Age 70 LOCAL 2103 Leslie Lonneerg March 3, 2014 Age 94
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