Union Concerns
If you feel ignored, pressured, or unsupported by your union, we help you understand what questions to ask and what steps may be available.
Independent Labour Advice Centre
Confidential guidance for workers who want to understand their rights, their union's obligations, and their options for workplace representation.
We are not your employer, not your union, and not a labour board. We provide independent information, consultation, and referrals so you can make informed decisions.
Start with a confidential review before you collect signatures, contact a board, or respond to a union decision.
Careful, worker-focused support for grievances, representation concerns, and next-step planning.
Plain-language explanations, document preparation, and referrals when legal advice is needed.
What we help with
Unionized employees often face complex questions about representation, grievances, collective agreements, union dues, workplace rights, and labour-board procedures. We help workers understand the process, prepare questions, organize documents, and connect with appropriate professionals when legal advice is needed.
Union Concerns
If you feel ignored, pressured, or unsupported by your union, we help you understand what questions to ask and what steps may be available.
Grievance Support
If you are dealing with discipline, termination, accommodation, seniority, scheduling, harassment, or workplace conflict, we can help you review the situation and prepare for your next conversation.
Fair Representation Issues
Unions generally have duties when representing employees. We help you understand whether your concern may involve a fair representation issue and what information you should collect.
Changing Representation
Employees may want to understand whether changing unions, removing bargaining rights, or another representation model is possible in their jurisdiction.
Decertification Education
Decertification, sometimes called revocation or termination of bargaining rights, is handled through labour boards and depends on jurisdiction, timing, and employee support.
Professional Referrals
When legal advice is required, we can help identify the right type of labour lawyer, paralegal, consultant, or public labour-board resource.
Common situations
Review what has happened so far, what the agreement says, and what questions to ask before a deadline passes.
Organize your documents, identify the key dates, and prepare for your next meeting or referral.
Learn the difference between frustration, internal union concerns, labour-board issues, and formal representation change processes.
Important caution
Do not miss grievance or labour-board deadlines. Do not collect signatures, involve management, or pressure coworkers until you understand the applicable rules in your jurisdiction.
Download the worker representation checklistYour options
Separate workplace facts, union communication issues, and legal questions so you know what kind of support is appropriate.
Provincial and federal labour relations processes can differ on timelines, forms, and board jurisdiction.
Save correspondence, identify deadlines, and understand what should not be done before rules are clear.
Move forward with questions, consultation support, or a legal referral that matches the facts.
How the consultation works
Confidentiality and independence
Workers often need a private space to understand what their documents mean, what deadlines may apply, and whether frustration with the process points to a practical problem, an internal union issue, or a possible labour-board concern.
Consultations are intended to be confidential, but the difference between confidentiality and legal privilege matters. We explain how information is reviewed, when a referral is appropriate, and why licensed legal advice may still be necessary.
Do not do this
FAQ preview
Yes. Unionized employees may seek independent information about their rights, collective agreement, grievance process, and labour-board options. The right type of advice depends on the issue and jurisdiction.
In some circumstances, employees may be able to seek a change in representation, but the process is regulated and depends on labour-board rules, timing, and employee support. You should get independent advice before taking steps.
Decertification is a labour-board process that may end a union's bargaining rights for a bargaining unit. The process depends on jurisdiction, sector, timing, and evidence of employee support.
This is a sensitive area. Labour laws generally restrict employer interference in employee representation decisions. Employees should get independent advice and avoid employer-directed activity.
The service should treat inquiries as confidential. Our privacy policy explains how information is stored, who reviews it, and when legal privilege does or does not apply.
The service provides information, consultation, and referral support. Legal advice should only be provided by licensed legal professionals.
Confidential next step
If you are dealing with a grievance, a representation concern, or uncertainty about labour-board rules, start with a careful review of your documents, deadlines, and options.