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9:15 pm: The CUPE Local 3903 website is reporting that all three units of the union rejected York University’s contract offer by wide margins.
Here are the results:
Unit 1: 61.7% No.
Unit 2: 59.3% No.
Unit 3: 70% No.
9:25 pm: York University has released a hard-line statement on the union vote, in which university president Mamdouh Shoukri suggests that the rejected proposal was York’s final offer: “We have no intention of negotiating for the sake of appearance,” he said. “This is our offer for settlement. Now it is up to the Union and its members to reconsider their demands and step back from the brink.”
More as the story develops.
9:58 pm: The CUPE 3903 executive has released its own statement on the ratification vote. They say 1466 union members voted “no” — 63% of those voting, and something close to a majority of the full membership of the local.
Key quote: “We are confident the solidarity that has been shown over the past few months will remain through to the end and beyond the strike.”
10:39 pm: The folks at yorkstrike2008 noticed something in the York statement that I missed: They’re talking explicitly for the first time about the possibility of cancelling a semester.
In his statement, President Shoukri said he would be “working with the deans and Senate Executive to prepare plans to further extend the academic calendar to ensure that students complete their fall and winter terms. This will mean reducing or, if need be, cancelling the summer term.”
10:47 pm: Student group YorkNotHostage is renewing its call for binding arbitration in light of the strike vote, and saying that unless unless the two sides agree to a binding arbitration proposal, it will “ask Premier Dalton McGuinty to recall the Legislature and pass back to work legislation as quickly as possible.”
11:04 pm: An online article from MacLeans magazine says the Ontario provincial government is rejecting calls for back-to-work legislation — a government spokesperson says the education minister’s “position from the beginning has been that the bargaining table is the place to resolve this matter.”
11:41 am, January 21: New updates to this story will be posted here.
Voting has closed in the York University contract ratification referendum, and the word we’re hearing is that results should be made public between 9 and 10 pm tonight.
As soon as we hear anything, we’ll pass it along.
9:15 PM Update: All three units have decisively rejected the university’s offer. Strike will continue. Ongoing updates here.
In the fall of 1964 the leaders of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee made a visit to West Africa. At the time SNCC was one of the most prominent civil rights organizations in the United States, and its leaders were among the country’s most capable black activists.
Traveling to Africa from Jim Crow America was a shock for these young people. At one point on the trip, as the group boarded an airplane, SNCC communications director Julian Bond noticed that the pilot was black. He turned to a friend and, only half joking, said “I hope this guy knows what he’s doing.”
Forty-five years ago one of America’s strongest advocates of racial equality wasn’t quite sure that he trusted a black man to fly a plane. Today at noon, a black man will be sworn in as president of the United States of America.
How quickly did this happen? How fast did we move from then to now?
Here’s how quickly. Here’s how fast.
When Julian Bond stepped onto that airplane, America’s first black president was three years old.

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