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Recovering backpacker, Cornwallite at heart, political enthusiast, catalyst, writer, husband, father, community volunteer, unabashedly proud Canadian. Every hyperlink connects to something related directly or thematically to that which is highlighted.

Tuesday 26 February 2013

Getting Ontario Working: A Labour of Love




 
 
 
 
I know Yasir, so I'm biased, but from what I know of the new Minister of Labour he is absolutely the right person to make this happen.  He's positive, energetic, disciplined, an active listener and someone not afraid to look outside the box in search of shared solutions.
 
Which is important, because that's a concept that isn't universally accepted - that sustainable solutions have to be shared.  I have spoken with union representatives who are convinced employer partners are determined to succeed at the expense of their labour; I've also talked with employers who feel union reps don't care about the sustainability of a business, only that their members get enough financial remuneration to pay their union dues.  We have some political leaders who flatly reject cooperation, taking a "my way or the highway" approach and instead of seeking opportunity are expending their resources attacking their competitors.
 
It's this static, entrenched dichotomy that restricts partners from finding the innovative, sustainable shared solutions that will allow them (and us) to move forward together.  The problem isn't one group or another - they are following the established rules and competing in the traditional methods.  It's the rules and methods themselves that are holding us back from collaborative, innovative success.
 
The model of work most organizations are using today was designed for the Industrial Revolution, when a whole different set of products/services were being created and a different kind of labour was required to produce them.
 
This model is tried, tested, comfortable and completely inadequate to the challenges presented by the Knowledge Economy.  You simply can't motivate cognitive labour using the same tools you do to motivate physical labour.  That's not speculation - that's evidence-based science.
 
It's not the first time we've come across a cognitive dissonance between what people think works versus what actually does work.
 
The Labour Revolution that stemmed from the Industrial Revolution was the exact same sort of economic birthing pain we're going through right now.  Resisted at the onset (and in some quarters, still resisted today), labour accommodation benefited both means-of-production owners and the labour they employed.  From a systems perspective, the labour revolution was about maximizing labour efficiency by providing the right accommodations to workers. 
 
It turned out that when you provide lunch breaks and humane lighting/humidity levels and the opportunity for wage increases/promotion, the aggregate productivity of your organization was higher than if you worked employees like serfs.  Quality-of-life went up for workers, profits and satisfaction went up for employers.  Everyone gave a little, but gained more through developing (wait for it) shared solutions.
 
It wasn't about one group winning at the expense of the other - it was about strategic collaboration.  Growth and efficiency resulted from everyone working smarter.
 
Lo and behold, Canada suffers from a deepening productivity gap - people are working harder and longer, but don't have an equal growth of productivity to show for it.  We also have an unheralded business crisis in Canada that's negatively impacting productivity, job satisfaction and our expanding healthcare bills.  It's the trillion dollar elephant in the our workplaces.
 
Sound familiar?  Cyclical, almost?  
  
The challenge that faces Minister Naqvi and, more broadly, labour in Canada/Ontario is how to get ahead of the curve and proactively develop new work platforms before the old ones have completely burned through.  Innovative companies like Apple and Google have already gotten way out in front by accommodating their cognitive labour, which is why they lead the pack in growth and success.  We're seeing tentatives steps in that direction at the Federal level with Labour Minister Lisa Raitt's Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace guide.  
 
These measures are a good starting place but again, it's reactive.  If we as a society want to remain competitive in the global marketplace for ideas, we have to get out in front.  Unfortunately, we have fallen into a culture of polarized antagonism that has impeded our individual and collective potential for growth.  To break through this impasse, we need to tear down our firewall silos and explore new ideas, collaborate, innovate, dare to dream a little.  At our current conservative pace, Canada and Ontario are falling behind early adapting competitor jurisdictions.  Remember, early adaptation to the Industrial Economy played a huge role in shaping the super powers of the last century.
 
Which brings us back to Yasir and the Premier that tapped him for Labour, Kathleen Wynne.  These are people who fundamentally reject the politics of division; they understand that stoking fear of the other discourages collaboration and encourages stasis.  You have to love your neighbour before you're able to trust them and trust is fundamental to collaboration.  This is the reason the Throne Speech focused on the three pillars of economic growth, individual opportunity and cooperation - the three have to be addressed in tandem for any one of them to be realized.  What we need to succeed today is a culture of collaboration that makes this possible.
 
We have what it takes to go far - but it'll only happen when we are willing to do so together.

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