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2024-2026-Exec

Connect with Local 79

34 St Patrick St,
Toronto, ON M5T 1V1

Phone

416 977-1629

Fax

416 977-9546

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Today, members of CUPE Local 79 joined the Toronto and York Region Labour Council at Larry Sefton Park to mark the National Day of Mourning — honouring workers killed, injured, or made ill on the job.

TYRLC President Andria Babbington took a moment to acknowledge our fellow member from Recreation who died at work. Her words carried our message that no worker should ever be working alone.

We carry the memory of our fellow member with us.
Since 2019, food bank usage in Toronto has grown by 340%. Last year alone, there were 4.1 million visits to Toronto food banks between April 2024 and March 2025. Today, 1 in 10 Torontonians relies on a food bank to get by.

On May 22 and 23, Toronto workers are coming together at the Toronto Workers Summit to demand better.
Last week, Local 79 members laced up and took to the court at the 5th Annual Steelworkers Basketball Classic alongside members from unions across the province.

This year’s proceeds support the Steelworkers Humanity Fund and its work sending life-saving medical supplies to Cuba through Containers 4 Cuba.
Toronto is Canada’s most unequal city.

With a Gini coefficient of 0.407, Toronto has the widest income gap of any major Canadian city measured by Statistics Canada — sitting well above the national average of 0.353, and far ahead of cities like Montréal (0.343), Halifax (0.331), and Québec City (0.293). Vancouver is the only city that comes close, at 0.385.

This is the city we work in. The city we live in. The city we keep running every single day.

On May 22nd and 23rd, workers from across the city are coming together at the Toronto Workers Summit to change that. We’ll be developing a shared vision for the city — and building an organizing plan to hold mayoral and council candidates accountable in the upcoming municipal election.
Something big is in the works.

On May 22nd and 23rd, workers from across Toronto will come together for the first ever Toronto Workers Summit — a gathering to build a shared vision for our city and demand that mayoral and council candidates commit to what workers and the communities we serve actually need.

From shelter workers to children’s services, from museum staff to public health — Toronto’s workers are organizing, and we’re just getting started.

Stay tuned.
Municipal workers in Montréal are standing up for a fair deal, and Local 79 stands with them.

We showed up on the picket line with our siblings at CUPE 301 (Syndicat des cols bleus regroupés de Montréal), who are on strike demanding wages that keep pace with the cost of living. An 11% raise over five years isn’t good enough — not in this economy.

Solidarity doesn’t stop at city limits.
Today, members of CUPE Local 79 joined the Toronto and York Region Labour Council at Larry Sefton Park to mark the National Day of Mourning — honouring workers killed, injured, or made ill on the job.

TYRLC President Andria Babbington took a moment to acknowledge our fellow member from Recreation who died at work. Her words carried our message that no worker should ever be working alone.

We carry the memory of our fellow member with us.
Since 2019, food bank usage in Toronto has grown by 340%. Last year alone, there were 4.1 million visits to Toronto food banks between April 2024 and March 2025. Today, 1 in 10 Torontonians relies on a food bank to get by.

On May 22 and 23, Toronto workers are coming together at the Toronto Workers Summit to demand better.
Last week, Local 79 members laced up and took to the court at the 5th Annual Steelworkers Basketball Classic alongside members from unions across the province.

This year’s proceeds support the Steelworkers Humanity Fund and its work sending life-saving medical supplies to Cuba through Containers 4 Cuba.
Toronto is Canada’s most unequal city.

With a Gini coefficient of 0.407, Toronto has the widest income gap of any major Canadian city measured by Statistics Canada — sitting well above the national average of 0.353, and far ahead of cities like Montréal (0.343), Halifax (0.331), and Québec City (0.293). Vancouver is the only city that comes close, at 0.385.

This is the city we work in. The city we live in. The city we keep running every single day.

On May 22nd and 23rd, workers from across the city are coming together at the Toronto Workers Summit to change that. We’ll be developing a shared vision for the city — and building an organizing plan to hold mayoral and council candidates accountable in the upcoming municipal election.

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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