About

Ontario’s union for library workers

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) represents more than 22,000 library worker, including those in more than 60 municipal library systems across the province, as well as at Southern Ontario Library Services.

In southwestern Ontario, our members work in every library job classification, and you can find more detailed information about our library membership and campaigns on our national library sector profile page.

CUPE is Canada’s largest and fastest-growing union, with more than 700,000 members from coast to coast, working in municipalities, health care, social services, universities, school boards, transportation, communications, and more. In the last two years alone, our membership has grown by more than 50,000.

Why join CUPE?

CUPE will fight to protect your rights as a worker, for fairness in your workplace and ensure respect from your employer.

Being a CUPE member means you have the materials, information, programs, and staff expertise needed to meet the employer on equal terms, and negotiate better working conditions.

Each member has the assistance of a CUPE national representative. Representatives provide assistance with collective bargaining, grievances, health and safety, arbitrations, and other work-related issues.

Our staff also includes specialists who provide members with expertise in labour law, research, education, communications, job evaluation and pay equity, discrimination and equality, health and safety, technology, and more.

In CUPE the members are in charge. In each CUPE local, the members democratically elect their leadership and bargaining committee members, and decide their priorities for bargaining, when to settle a new contract, and how to manage funds.

CUPE’s strength comes from individual members working toward common goals. Together we maintain and improve wages and benefits, improve health and safety conditions, and make your workplace better.

How to join CUPE

In order to join CUPE you must complete, sign and date a CUPE membership card. This is a two-step process: First you fill out the online form, then we will email you back a card you can sign digitally. Only after completing both steps will you have signed a card. Signing a membership card is a requirement under the Ontario Labour Relations Act.

Once CUPE has received cards from at least 50% of employees, CUPE will file an Application for Certification. When CUPE files the Application the membership cards are sent to the Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB) with the Application. The cards are completely confidential and the employer will never know who signed a card.

When CUPE files the Application for Certification the Employer is served with a copy of the Application (not the membership cards). Approximately six business days following the filing of the application, the OLRB will hold a secret ballot vote using electronic ballots. No one will ever know how you voted. The vote is what determines whether CUPE is successful or not. It is a simple majority vote, so if 100 people come out to vote and 51 vote in favour of joining the union, then everyone will become part of the union.