I've never been a union worker, nor do I care about their silly antics.... some family members are unionized. And when I hear them complain with their entitled demands, I shake my head. My other family members who work in the private sector agree with me. The dumbest debates we have is when "sick days" are discussed. Union workers want to bank them indefinitely and then cash them out like a bonus. Private sectors guys like me have a view that they are there if you need them. But if you don't use them, why should a company pay you out 200 sick days when you never were sick.
It's not like this is 100 years ago when workers were all getting taken advantage of with low wages and unsafe work (those horror stories and vids you hear about how shoddy manufacturing was long time ago).
It's 2016. Get with the times. If your company is outsourcing stuff to another country it means you aren't as good. Costs, quality or a combo of both. If your unionized company was worth keeping, they would make it easy for themselves and stick around. Nobody wants to move, and no company wants to have the hassle of coordinating manufacturing with head office 5,000 miles away.
Also, unionized works are mistaken that moving facilities is all about costs. We have manufacturing in Japan. Not exactly cheap. I wouldn't be surprised if it costs more to make stuff there then to dissolve it and make everything in Canada or the US, but we keep the Japan plant and ship everything across the pacific because it's too risky to mess with the plant, since it churns out is excellent quality product.
Also, even if it's proven making something in Mexico is worse than a Canadian or US plant, it all comes back to cost/benefit/quality. Perhaps the quality is a bit worse from Mexican workers. And it takes time to ship from there. But if the costs are that much better, it leads to a companies improved profitability, and more importantly it gives extra margin to play with to compete against competitors. And who says every product everywhere has to be top notch quality (assuming Canadians make high quality)? There's a reason why stores like Dollarama are doing great and Walmart (with their avg quality merchandise) hum along. Not everyone wants to pay a lot of money for certain things.
I make good money myself, but I shop at Dollarama and Walmart too. If I need a pizza cutter, Dollarama has ones for $3. Probably made in China. Good enough for me. Or I can go to Kitchen Stuff Plus and buy a fancy one with a fancy European brand name for $20. For me, a $3 is fine.
If everything was all about quality with zero concern about costs or competitive pricing, then unionized Canadian workers shouldn't complain anyway. Ship all manufacturing to counties with better quality. I'd take German or Japan quality over Canadian hard goods any time.
And lastly, unionized workers are hypocrites anyway. It's all about keeping jobs. But check out what they buy and where they shop. I bet most of the stuff they buy isn't made in Canada anyway. I can understand some things like electronics (since I don't think there are any Canadian makers of TVs and such), or certain foods (like pineapples etc...), but there are Canadian options for most goods out there. You just have to look for it. But like everyone else, most things in their home is made from another country.
So when it comes to jobs, they are insistent about keeping their own. When it comes to shopping, their purchases of foriegn products (which hurts other Canadian companies), is of no concern.