Consequently, industrial action involving lockouts would entail enormous social and political upheaval. |
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Alberta's Public Service Employee Relations Act prohibits strikes and lockouts of workers in public services, including nurses. |
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Between 1984 and 86, there was a total of 962 disputes, including strikes, stoppages or lockouts under the Labour government. |
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A whole spate of lockouts followed, as employers dug in their heels and either dragged out negotiations or terminated them. |
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Between 1998 and 2001, lockouts accounted for 57 percent of all industrial disputes. |
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Employers have carried out a series of previous lockouts, mainly barring construction workers entering work sites for weekend overtime. |
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Does this scenario sound like the 2002 dockworker dispute at West Coast ports prompted by lockouts of longshoremen? |
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On the Internet, though, you can have a simple script do that, and even distribute the requests over time and over a botnet to evade lockouts. |
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And I have not even counted days lost due to strikes, hartals, bandhs, lockouts and the like. |
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Another way of regulating rates of pay is a by-product of arbitration systems set up originally as a means of avoiding strikes and lockouts. |
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The Board takes a remedial, non-judgemental approach in responding to applications involving unlawful strikes and lockouts. |
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Strikes and lockouts grew to crisis proportions by the last year of the war. |
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Strikes and lockouts became illegal, and wages fell between 1927 and 1934, but the syndicates had considerable political influence. |
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Those using leaked keys will be needing a new one, and if lockouts are implemented in the shipping product then they'll also face the inconvenience of a reinstall. |
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There needs to be some kind of alternative to strikes or lockouts as an absolute dispute settlement mechanism. |
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A similar imbalance between the power of teachers and school boards is pointed to with respect to strikes and lockouts. |
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Labour and financial contracts have lengthened, while the amount of time lost to strikes and lockouts has dropped. |
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It does not include time lost to strikes, lockouts, annual vacation, public holidays, sick leave, maternity leave or leave for personal needs. |
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However, the amount that comes out of the fund every month depends on how many strikes or lockouts we have. |
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Whereas Canada 's data is based on strikes or lockouts lasting more than one-half day and resulting in at least ten person days not worked, other countries have a much higher threshold than ours. |
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Strikes and lockouts shall be forbidden to every person as of the coming into force of the agreement and for as long as the right to strike and lock out is not acquired in accordance with the Labour Code. |
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You usually hear about the ones that end up with strikes or lockouts. You don't hear about the hundreds of contracts successfully negotiated every year where noone has to hit the bricks. |
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Experience has shown that the prohibition on the use of strikebreakers has contributed to civilized industrial relations during work stoppages and it has also reduced the number of workdays lost due to strikes or lockouts. |
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For added safety a remote panel houses a stairway light switch, engine shutdown switch, and lockouts for the transmission and engine starter. |
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Accordingly, the Board gives top priority to applications respecting unlawful strikes and lockouts, and expedites all proceedings, both informal and formal. |
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He has sold lockouts just as ably as he has sold replica jerseys. |
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The ACPA's contract expired at the end of March, but reports indicate that the union and the airline are not considering strikes or lockouts at the moment. |
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In the United States, lockouts became a common tactic by employers in the 1880s and '90s, when unions of silver and lead miners in Nevada, Colorado, Idaho, and Utah were fighting for an eight-hour day and higher pay. |
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This suited the sour command of their chief executive, the league commissioner, Gary Bettman, who has now presided over three debilitating lockouts and thousands of cancelled games. |
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The report therefore urges that the Minister of Education be given the power to delay or terminate strikes or lockouts on such terms as he or she deems appropriate. |
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In the orderly scheme for resolving collective bargaining disputes that is set out in the Code, it is not strikes and lockouts themselves that are regulated. |
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The same source noted that labour disputes are frequent in New Caledonia, leading to many hours of lost productivity owing to strikes and lockouts. |
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This also includes strikes, lockouts as well as other obstructions for which BoD does not bear responsibility, in particular non-culpable machine breakdown, electricity and water outage. |
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Lockouts are, with certain exceptions, lawful under United States labor law. |
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