Pensioners send message to Whitehorse meeting
The union representing forestry workers and the Nortel pensioners association - two organizations that speak for those pensioners -- have today sent a letter to the finance ministers asking them to "make sure we don't abandon pensioners and other workers, who through no fault of their own, face major cuts to their retirement and replacement incomes because their employers took refuge in the bankruptcy courts."
The Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of
They are calling on for a National Pension and Investment Fund to be jointly or distinctly run by federal or provincial regulatory bodies for pension plans. The fund turns on the idea that the pension plans of employers facing bankruptcy be allowed to continue to exist in a trust fund, rather than being terminated. The fund would be administered with a long-term perspective, as are the CPP and QPP. This requires government support and regulatory approval, but no cash infusion. The NRPC has taken the NPIF concept to the Ontario government asking them as a matter of urgency to establish an Ontario Pension Orphanage with day-to-day operations administered by a government agency.
"A string of bankruptcy filings since January -- from Nortel, to forest giants AbitibiBowater and Fraser Papers, and most recently Canwest, has made it alarmingly clear that employers can legally up and walk away from their pension obligations," says CEP
"But what's even more alarming, is that governments at all levels have been slow to take advantage of a relatively simple solution that would help us all sleep better at night."
"The future of many vulnerable retirees is at stake," concludes
To see a copy of the letter sent today from
For further information: Dave Coles, (613) 299-5628; Don Sproule, NRPC, National Chair, (613) 266-9336, [email protected] or Tony Marsh, NRPC Media Relations, (613) 832-4817, [email protected]
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