Vancouver Animators Win Overtime Pay In ‘Sausage Party’ Pay Dispute

Authored by cartoonbrew.com and submitted by michaeltanzillo
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The B.C. Employment Standards Branch ruling requires Nitrogen (now owned by Cinesite) to open its books and pay any outstanding overtime along with a nominal $500 fine. A PDF of the government ruling can be read HERE.

In response to the complaint, Cinesite had originally claimed that employees were not entitled to the overtime pay specified in the province’s Employment Standards Act, because animation artists were high-technology professionals developing information systems. The Employment Standard Branch’s investigating officer, however, ruled that the exclusion did not apply to studio workers whose primary job was using commercially available software to create visual effects.

According to Unifor, the high-tech exclusion is used often by animation, vfx, and gaming studios in British Columbia as a loophole to exempt them from the province’s rules on work hours, overtime, and statutory holidays.

Currently, not a single animation, vfx, or gaming studio in Vancouver is unionized, but different initiatives by unions like Unifor and IATSE (International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees) are working to change that situation. “If we can do this for non-union workers, imagine what animators could do if they unionized and negotiated their own contract,” Moreau said.

On Wednesday, March 27, a townhall is being held for Titmouse Vancouver workers to explain the benefits of unionization. If you work at the studio, you can register to attend HERE. The event is organized by the Art Babbitt Appreciation Society, a group of artists in Vancouver who are working to improve the working conditions at local studios.

Shayneros on March 28th, 2019 at 08:33 UTC »

Awesome news. Animators/VFX artists get treated so poorly in the industry because everyone is trying to do everything for as cheap as possible

octatone on March 28th, 2019 at 08:02 UTC »

Why is there even an overtime pay exclusion for high-tech professionals?

BunyipPouch on March 28th, 2019 at 02:45 UTC »

According to Unifor, the high-tech exclusion is used often by animation, vfx, and gaming studios in British Columbia as a loophole to exempt them from the province’s rules on work hours, overtime, and statutory holidays.

Solid victory, but the law needs to be changed so it doesn't keep happening.