For many years,
the Alliance has been a pioneer in ameliorating work conditions for workers
in the stage industry in Quebec.
Our Quebec local
sections regroup about 800 members. These workers occupy positions as stage
technicians, make-up artists, dressers, projectionists, audiovisual
technicians, and office clerks and cinema floor staff.
From the stages
of Place des Arts to the stage of the Theatre du Nouveau Monde, from
conventional cinemas to the giant IMAX screens, from posh reception halls to
the worst mud fields of summer festivals, we represent the employees of the
most important sites of shows, amusement and productions of Quebec, and this
for over a century.
The custodian
dean of our local sections, local 56, was created in 1897, which makes it
one of the oldest unions in Quebec and the first of stage employees to be
recognized in Canada. Even the first Canadian vice-president of the Alliance
was a member of local 56.
For their part,
the cinema projectionists of Montreal founded local section 262 since the
opening of the first cinema in Montreal, the famous Ouimetoscope, in 1912.
Section 262 also encompasses since 1994 the floor staff of cinemas. A third
local section was later created, local 863, which regroups dressers more
specifically. Another section was also founded in Quebec, local section 523,
a mixed section that encompasses at its core stage technicians, dressers,
projectionists and the floor staff of cinemas.
Our members have
been a part of all the notable moments in Quebec cultural life, a tradition
that goes as far back as Sarah Bernhardt’s tours. As to more recent events,
the list is eloquent: Expo 67, the superfrancofête, the productions of the
TNM, the Jean-Duceppe Company, the National Arts Center, the Quebec Opera
and the Montreal Opera, the MSO and Grands Ballets Canadians tours, as well
as the super- productions such as Gala, Napoleon-Lama or Nelligan, without
forgetting the great display shows at the Forum, the Molson Center, the
Autostade, Jarry park, the Olympic Stadium and elsewhere, as well as big
popular gathering, such as the Saint-Jean Baptiste shows of 1999 and 2000 at
Maisonneuve park.
The local
sections of the Alliance in Quebec are not, no matter what some may think or
say in certain places, the agent of any conspiracy whatsoever having as a
target to insure American hegemony on our cultural lives. This is a myth
propagated by people whose interest is not to create an obstacle to foreign
interference, but to create an obstacle to the unionization of workers who
painfully need it.
As affiliates of
the FTQ and Canadian Labor Congress, the Alliance and its local sections are
submitted to strict criteria of national autonomy (among other dispositions,
the moneys of dues collected in Canada remains in Canada, all the Canadian
leaders are elected by Canadian members and delegates, and the decisions of
the Canadian district associations have the power of law).