Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Construction Unions Vote To Extend Contract As Workers Await Site C Jobs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2015 01:32 PM
  • B.C. Construction Unions Vote To Extend Contract As Workers Await Site C Jobs
VANCOUVER — Unionized construction workers in British Columbia have voted to approve a contract extension to their collective agreement.
 
Mark Olsen, chairman of the B.C. Building Trade Unions, says the deal is important for projects such as the multibillion-dollar Site C hydroelectric dam.
 
There are also a number of planned mining, pipeline, marine terminal and liquefied natural gas projects.
 
Members of 16 trade unions voted on the deal, which Olsen says will keep the labour climate stable.
 
Rob Tuzzi, the bargaining council's secretary-treasurer, says companies involved in large construction projects typically look to unions to help them recruit the workers they need.
 
Olsen says the deal extends current contracts for more than 40,000 workers to the end of next April, and negotiations for contracts beyond that date are to begin later this spring.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec coroner recommends automatic sprinklers for seniors' homes, old and new

Quebec coroner recommends automatic sprinklers for seniors' homes, old and new
MONTREAL — A Quebec coroner says all certified seniors' homes in the province, old and new, should be equipped with automatic sprinkler systems to avoid tragedies like the one that killed 32 people a little over a year ago.

Quebec coroner recommends automatic sprinklers for seniors' homes, old and new

RCMP watchdog raps Mountie gun seizures from High River homes during 2013 flood

RCMP watchdog raps Mountie gun seizures from High River homes during 2013 flood
OTTAWA — The RCMP watchdog says Mounties improperly took guns from flood-stricken homes in Alberta two years ago — seizures that angered High River residents and fostered mistrust of the national police force.

RCMP watchdog raps Mountie gun seizures from High River homes during 2013 flood

Ontario father and daughter doing well after life-saving liver transplant

Ontario father and daughter doing well after life-saving liver transplant
TORONTO — Doctors say an Ontario father and his daughter are doing well after undergoing life-saving liver transplant surgery on Tuesday.

Ontario father and daughter doing well after life-saving liver transplant

Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy ordered released on bail by Egyptian judge

Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy ordered released on bail by Egyptian judge
A Canadian journalist who has spent more than a year in a Cairo prison moved one step closer to freedom Thursday as an Egyptian court ordered him released on bail.

Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy ordered released on bail by Egyptian judge

Snowbirds, including first flag seamstress, party in Florida for 50th birthday

Snowbirds, including first flag seamstress, party in Florida for 50th birthday
OTTAWA — Five decades ago, a young Joan O'Malley was summoned by her father one snowy November night to sew Canada's first Maple Leaf flag.

Snowbirds, including first flag seamstress, party in Florida for 50th birthday

Lester B. Pearson's tea party about new Canadian flag spurred media hostilities

Lester B. Pearson's tea party about new Canadian flag spurred media hostilities
OTTAWA — Lester B. Pearson was so delighted by his pick for a potential new Canadian flag that the Liberal prime minister summoned some journalists to 24 Sussex Drive in the summer of 1964 to show it off.

Lester B. Pearson's tea party about new Canadian flag spurred media hostilities