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OPINION: COVID-19 has shifted the way we view work in B.C.

This Labour Day is a lot different from past years. You won’t see the big parades, rallies and parties we usually have. Instead it’s small, carefully distanced backyard get-togethers and on-screen virtual celebrations.
COVID-19, grocery store worker, stock photo
The COVID-19 pandemic has redefined how we see "essential" work in our society.

This Labour Day is a lot different from past years. You won’t see the big parades, rallies and parties we usually have. Instead it’s small, carefully distanced backyard get-togethers and on-screen virtual celebrations.

But there’s a deeper change that’s happening, too. Something important has shifted in B.C.

This year has reminded us all of just how utterly and completely our province relies on working people: to keep our economy going, to provide the necessities of life, to deliver the services families need.

2020 has taught us that the front lines are much broader and deeper than many people assumed. Suddenly, many of the lowest-paid workers in the most precarious jobs are finally getting long-overdue recognition. And we’ve stopped seeing workplace safety as something that only affects individual workers and started recognizing it for what it is: a vital underpinning of public health.

What’s more, we’re discovering there’s a lot more we can be doing to make life better for all of us. The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted governments to come together with quick, dramatic action on a wide range of fronts: supporting the incomes of laid-off workers, protecting vulnerable British Columbians with increases to disability and income assistance rates, providing help for renters, subsidizing wages, investing in health care and education, improving employment standards and workplace safety, and making the first moves toward paid sick leave.

Of course, a lot of this has happened because B.C. has the benefit of a provincial government that listens to working people. The contrast with other provinces –  and south of the border – is often stark.

But we’ve also had something else on our side: a strong, determined labour movement backed by working people across B.C. And there’s every reason to believe that movement is gaining strength.

There’s a new momentum for organizing, and a big part of that comes as the pandemic shows working people that our lives are on the line. The stronger and more united we are, the better we’re able to press for safer workplaces, better working conditions and a fairer deal.

And that’s doubly important now, because we’ve learned something else in the past several months.

COVID-19 exposed how deep and wide the gaps in our province are, and how many people have been left out and sold short in B.C.’s economy. Those gaps and inequities weren’t just unfair in and of themselves; they were vulnerabilities the virus exploited and left us all more exposed and at risk. But the way we’ve responded, as communities and through governments, shows us we don’t have to just accept those gaps.

So as much as 2020 has been about shutting down, it’s also increasingly about opening up – that is, opening up possibilities for positive, lasting changes. And this year, that’s what’s really worth celebrating: this new sense of possibility and potential in the strength we have together.

The pandemic is far from over, but the rebuilding in B.C. has begun. And as we rebuild, we can regain what we had – but we can also rebuild something stronger and fairer.

We can build stronger, more resilient communities that are better able to grapple with big challenges, whether it’s ending this pandemic, fighting off the next one or addressing the threat of climate change. We can build a fairer, greener economy where everyone can benefit – and where we make every job a good job. We can make investments that improve crucial services everywhere from classrooms to hospitals to transit.

Thanks to the working people of B.C., we are going to emerge from this pandemic. So that we can hold out hope that next year, we’ll be able to truly celebrate together.

Laird Cronk is president and Sussanne Skidmore is secretary-treasurer of the B.C. Federation of Labour.