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34 St Patrick St,
Toronto, ON M5T 1V1

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416 977-1629

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416 977-9546

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Today we marched for International Women’s Day under the powerful theme “Rise and Resist: Uniting for a New World.” The rally reflected the strength and diversity of the feminist movement, bringing together women, workers, migrants, racialized communities, queer and trans activists, and allies. International Women’s Day has always been rooted in struggle, and today’s march continued that tradition by demanding dignity, safety, and justice for women and gender-diverse people in our communities and beyond.

Speakers and marchers reminded us that feminism shouldn’t stop at borders. Our struggle is tied to the fight for liberation everywhere — for a world where women and communities are free from occupation, displacement, and war, and where people can live, organize, and build their futures without fear of violence or bombs overhead.
Local 79 stood in solidarity with students rallying at Queen’s Park today to oppose changes to OSAP that shift student aid from grants to loans. 

Thousands gathered calling on Premier Doug Ford and Minister Nolan Quinn to stop their attack on post-secondary education.

Organizers of the rally from the Canadian Federation of Students–Ontario reminded us that education should be a pathway out of precarity — not another bill students are forced to carry. Students from Universities across Ontario talked about the financial stress they’re experiencing a time when the cost of living is already overwhelming.

Accessible, affordable education strengthens our entire province. 
We stand with Ontario’s students!
This past Saturday, we came together for an afternoon of reflection, learning, and celebration. The program featured Land and Ancestral Acknowledgements, the Black National Anthem and poetry by Nicky Lawrence, welcome remarks from Brigett Coleman, an engaging Q&A with LTtheMonk (also our MC), and a powerful fireside chat with Robyn Maynard and Brianna Plummer.

We closed with a vibrant steelpan performance by Thadel Wilson, and time to connect over refreshments. Thank you to everyone who helped make the event so meaningful!
After meeting with leadership candidates and hearing their visions, CUPE Local 79’s Board has unanimously endorsed Avi Lewis for Leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party.

Every candidate we interviewed was great and would serve the party well. Our endorsement reflects Avi’s ability to articulate a bold and unapologetic progressive vision — one that does not settle for incremental change, but confronts inequality and the climate crisis at their roots. His commitment to strong public services and economic justice sets out a clear alternative for working people.

Avi understands that investing in public health, housing, long-term care, and frontline municipal services is how we build safer, more equitable communities. He is championing ambitious public investment, good union jobs, and a fair tax system that asks the wealthiest to contribute their fair share. He is prepared to challenge corporate power and put working people at the centre of economic decision-making.

When asked, ‘how are you going to ensure that party leaders adhere to working class principles and don’t cross the party line into another’, Avi’s response was decisive and rooted in all the right things. (See next post for his full response). 

We believe Avi Lewis offers the energy and conviction to mobilize and inspire people across Canada.
Today we marched for International Women’s Day under the powerful theme “Rise and Resist: Uniting for a New World.” The rally reflected the strength and diversity of the feminist movement, bringing together women, workers, migrants, racialized communities, queer and trans activists, and allies. International Women’s Day has always been rooted in struggle, and today’s march continued that tradition by demanding dignity, safety, and justice for women and gender-diverse people in our communities and beyond.

Speakers and marchers reminded us that feminism shouldn’t stop at borders. Our struggle is tied to the fight for liberation everywhere — for a world where women and communities are free from occupation, displacement, and war, and where people can live, organize, and build their futures without fear of violence or bombs overhead.
Local 79 stood in solidarity with students rallying at Queen’s Park today to oppose changes to OSAP that shift student aid from grants to loans. 

Thousands gathered calling on Premier Doug Ford and Minister Nolan Quinn to stop their attack on post-secondary education.

Organizers of the rally from the Canadian Federation of Students–Ontario reminded us that education should be a pathway out of precarity — not another bill students are forced to carry. Students from Universities across Ontario talked about the financial stress they’re experiencing a time when the cost of living is already overwhelming.

Accessible, affordable education strengthens our entire province. 
We stand with Ontario’s students!
This past Saturday, we came together for an afternoon of reflection, learning, and celebration. The program featured Land and Ancestral Acknowledgements, the Black National Anthem and poetry by Nicky Lawrence, welcome remarks from Brigett Coleman, an engaging Q&A with LTtheMonk (also our MC), and a powerful fireside chat with Robyn Maynard and Brianna Plummer.

We closed with a vibrant steelpan performance by Thadel Wilson, and time to connect over refreshments. Thank you to everyone who helped make the event so meaningful!

CUPE Local 79

Keeping Toronto at its best is what gets us up every morning. The work is worth it. And so are we.

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