Labour Day was a big event in the small town of Merritton,
Ontario, when I was a kid in the 1950s.
Most of the families were dependent on the work the men got
at the paper mills that sat on the edge of the Welland Canal.
Consequently, Labour Day with its show of force by the unions, was one of the most important holidays of the year.
But the factories are gone now and in recent years the unions
have been in such disfavour that the Labour Day Parade was renamed 'The
Community Days Parade' or something sad like that.
And the unions were only allowed to march after the parade was
finished.
It was a grim state of affairs.
But this year was different.
Labour was back and in a big way.
Peter Kormos led the parade and it gave everyone a chance to say thanks for his years of public service.
No more relegated to the back of the parade, the blue collar
(and yes white collar workers, too, Debra), marched at the front, in the middle
and at the end.
Hard to say.
I don't hold out much hope for the big unions.
But I would sure be happy to be wrong!