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Book Excerpt: The Closure Of A Mine And A Union Leader’s Identity Crisis

Fossil fuel workers will not resist change, Ken believes, as long as we take the fear out of the transition.

 With the closure of the Brunswick Mine looming, union leader Ken Smith and 1,500 miners faced a precarious future.“I realised that a big piece of my identity had been taken away.” (Copyright: Mychaylo Prystupa)
With the closure of the Brunswick Mine looming, union leader Ken Smith and 1,500 miners faced a precarious future.“I realised that a big piece of my identity had been taken away.” (Copyright: Mychaylo Prystupa)

In the months following the closure of the Brunswick Mine, Ken Smith’s confidence that he and his colleagues had done a “great job” in planning their own version of a just transition rapidly diminished. Although some of the mine’s laid-off workers, such as Ken, found high-paying energy and mining jobs in cities and mining camps across Canada and beyond, many more were left behind, and unemployment rates in Bathurst soared. Lost without the security of the mine, scores of small businesses that had sold mechanical equipment, nuts, bolts, and truck parts to Xstrata went bankrupt and closed. “The mine was the focal point of that community,” Ken says.

“We were doing something new with the transition, but we still fell short. We failed to recognise that moving away was not an option for many of our brothers and sisters. We failed to understand how badly this would hurt our community.”
Ken Smith, Union leader, Brunswick Mine

While many of the mining communities in northern Canada rely predominantly on an itinerant workforce, the Brunswick Mine had employed locally, mostly fishermen left unemployed following the decline of the New Brunswick fishing industry in the 1960s. The familial and emotional ties to Bathurst of these third- and fourth-generation residents made it impossible for some to leave. “For some of our miners—because they had elderly parents with no other caregivers, or family members with special needs, or just a familiarity with the place where they had lived their entire lives—leaving was not an option,” said Ken. “Now they are jobless, surviving on precarious work or employment insurance. Others are completely reliant on social assistance. These are people who worked for thirty or forty years in the mining industry, and this is now where they’ve found themselves.”

(Image courtesy: BloombergQuint) 
(Image courtesy: BloombergQuint) 

For those like Ken who found work in the Alberta oil sands, or in mines farther north, the strain of a long-distance commute—travelling back and forth for thousands of kilometres to work exhausting three- or four-week shifts—has wreaked havoc on their personal lives. Although wages are sometimes three or four times the rate of those back home, many marriages have crumbled under the strain of separation. Ken counts himself lucky that his wife of more than thirty years made a last-minute decision to move with him to Fort McMurray, a difficult decision for the couple, as they were forced to leave behind his wife’s beloved sister with special needs. Had his wife not accompanied him, Ken is adamant that he would not have lasted more than a couple of months on the oil sands. “It was very tough for me to leave Bathurst. I am fifty-six years old, and it is the first time I have been away from home. Believe it or not, even us old guys get homesick.”

The Albian Sands Energy Inc. Jackpine and Muskeg River mines are seen in this aerial photograph taken above the Athabasca oil sands near Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg) 
The Albian Sands Energy Inc. Jackpine and Muskeg River mines are seen in this aerial photograph taken above the Athabasca oil sands near Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg) 

To cope with this newfound sense of displacement, Ken busied himself with union organising at Fort McMurray. During the day, he worked on the gargantuan dump trucks that lumbered throughout the oil sands facilities. The rest of the time, as president of the Unifor Local 707A, he worked to protect the interests of thirty-five hundred Suncor Energy oil sand workers. In December 2015, that position led to a chance invitation to attend the UN climate summit in Paris as a union delegate. Sitting in the audience, listening to a panel discussion about clean-energy job creation, Ken felt uncomfortable that he and other fossil fuel workers were being demonised as climate change deniers, that oil sand workers such as him were just as toxic as the greenhouse gases that were choking up the atmosphere. “I have never been a huge environmentalist or anything like that,” said Ken. “I’m just a guy who goes to work each day. But I also accept the science because people who have the expertise are saying that climate change is real. When I was a kid, the winters came earlier and the snow was deeper and stayed on the ground longer. There has been a gradual warming in my fifty years. I accept the facts.”

Heavy haulers dump oil sand into a hopper during a grand opening event for the Suncor Fort Hills oil-sands extraction site near Fort McKay, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg) 
Heavy haulers dump oil sand into a hopper during a grand opening event for the Suncor Fort Hills oil-sands extraction site near Fort McKay, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg) 

Sensing an opportunity during the question-and-answer period, Ken stood up and took the microphone. He introduced himself as a fossil fuel worker. Many workers’ attitudes in his industry had shifted, Ken told the hushed room, they “get it” that climate change is real. The trick, Ken said, was ensuring that workers such as himself—and their families—would not be left behind in the transition to clean energy.

“[Fossil fuel workers] hope we’re seeing the end of fossil fuels for the good of everybody,” Ken told the room. “But how are we going to provide for our families? We’re going to need some kind of transition. We’ve moved out there, we’ve invested in that industry—and when it ends, we’re going to be left holding the bag.”

Ken’s brave and honest speech led to a rousing standing ovation, something that still makes him smile. “I have a grade twelve education and am a little rough around the edges. I am always amazed when someone wants to hear my opinion.” News of a fossil fuel worker calling for the demise of his own industry caused international headlines, catapulting Ken into the role of unlikely climate change hero. But to Ken, his speech at Paris was simply common sense: As someone who already knows what happens when your industry shuts down, he feels that he has something real to contribute to the discussion about what happens next. He just wishes that more people in the upper echelons of government and climate change policy would listen. “I was that miner with thirty-three years’ service when the mine closed down; I was that union president who had to look at my members. Members who were my union brothers and sisters, my friends, my teammates, school friends—they were much more than just co-workers and they wanted to keep their jobs much more than they wanted ‘transition.’ Now I am again that union president in an industry that is the only game in town. In a remote community that is dependent on the oil sands for survival. Again, we are talking about transition, but this time the conversation goes a bit further to a just transition, and what that means. We need to look to our past and see what we did well and where we fell short. We have time to get this right, but we will only get one shot at it.”

 The Suncor Energy Inc. Steepbank mine is seen in this aerial photograph taken above the Athabasca oil sands near Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg)
The Suncor Energy Inc. Steepbank mine is seen in this aerial photograph taken above the Athabasca oil sands near Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. (Photographer: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg)

For Ken—and Sharan Burrow—getting it right means governments partnering with workers from sectors that are about to lose jobs.

Fossil fuel workers will not resist change, Ken believes, as long as we take the fear out of the transition.

Ken knows that consultation matters from the conversations that he had with his co-workers at Fort McMurray, people like him who came to the oil sands from other failed industries. “They all came to Fort McMurray because they didn’t want to end up on welfare,” Ken says. “They wanted to do better, they wanted their children to have opportunities, they wanted to provide. I know that these people will not resist change if they know that their families will be protected. That is how you make partners out of the workforce. Preparation is way better than resistance. We know that the tide is coming in. Let’s prepare ourselves to move to the next job.”

Extracted with permission from Climate Justice A Man-Made Problem with a Feminist Solution, by Mary Robinson, Bloomsbury India.

The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.