Unions working together to make Alberta a better place
The Alberta Federation of Labour is a voluntary association of unions and employee organizations that have banded together to achieve common goals.
Since 1912, when unionized miners and tradespeople from southern Alberta first agreed to work together under the umbrella of a labour central, the Federation has fought hard to improve conditions for working people, their families and their communities.
Among the Federation’s earliest priorities were ending child labour and establishing occupational health and safety regulations — especially in Alberta’s coal fields which, at the time, had the highest workplace mortality rates in the world.
In its early years, the AFL was also active in the struggle for a minimum wage and the reduction of work time to a standard 8-hour work day.
Today, the Federation continues its tradition of speaking out on the issues that matter most to working people. Often these issues relate directly to the workplace. But the AFL is also active on a wide range of broader social issues — such as human rights, universal early childhood education and care, and the need for strong public education and health care.
For a copy of the 2021 Constitution of the Alberta Federation of Labour, CLC click here.