
Sask. Indigenous construction company claims it was barred from hiring employees from First Nations communities
CTV
A First Nations controlled construction company in Saskatchewan says it’s having trouble with its union after learning it can not hire employees directly from First Nations.
A First Nations controlled construction company in Saskatchewan says it’s having trouble with its union after learning it can not hire employees directly from First Nations.
KDM Contractors’ employees recently unionized and say that they were barred from hiring directly from First Nations communities after that.
“Our preferred route is to continue to get labour from the First Nations, not from the union hall,” Reginald Bellerose from KDM Contractors said.
KDM employs about 80 people who work primarily on potash projects. Half are First Nations, people.
“We are actually in legal action against the unions right now to prevent them from bringing a collective bargaining agreement to our company. Our agreement is between us and the First Nations. That’s where we want to keep it,” Bellerose said.
The Saskatchewan Building Trades Council represents construction trades unions. It said a group of KDM workers made the first approach to unionize.
“And they saw that they were being treated unfairly and so that’s why they reached out and upon certification, they immediately got a raise, pension and benefits,” Dion Malakoff from Saskatchewan Building Trades Council said.