Close X
Friday, January 10, 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

Income Splitting To Drain Workers From Labour Force: Budget Watchdog

Income Splitting To Drain Workers From Labour Force: Budget Watchdog
OTTAWA — Canada's parliamentary budget office believes the Harper government's controversial income-splitting tax plan will encourage workers to leave the labour force.

Income Splitting To Drain Workers From Labour Force: Budget Watchdog

Tory MP Larry Miller Says Niqab Comments Went Too Far But Stands By His Point Of View

Tory MP Larry Miller Says Niqab Comments Went Too Far But Stands By His Point Of View
OTTAWA — An Ontario Tory MP is apologizing after saying people who want to wear a niqab when swearing the oath of citizenship shouldn't come to Canada.

Tory MP Larry Miller Says Niqab Comments Went Too Far But Stands By His Point Of View

Terror Bill Provisions Would Have Stifled Quebec's Student Protests: Ex-leader

Terror Bill Provisions Would Have Stifled Quebec's Student Protests: Ex-leader
OTTAWA — Legislation such as Ottawa's proposed anti-terror bill would probably have put a quick end to Quebec's student uprising in 2012, says one of the movement's former leaders.

Terror Bill Provisions Would Have Stifled Quebec's Student Protests: Ex-leader

Omar Khadr Bail Application A 'violation' Of His U.s. Plea Deal, Ottawa Says

TORONTO — Canadian courts have no authority to grant Omar Khadr bail while he appeals his war-crimes conviction in the United States but should refuse to release him even if they do have the power, the federal government argues in a new legal brief.

Omar Khadr Bail Application A 'violation' Of His U.s. Plea Deal, Ottawa Says

Track Failures May Have Played Role In Northern Ontario Derailments, TSB Says

Track Failures May Have Played Role In Northern Ontario Derailments, TSB Says
Canada's transportation investigator says track infrastructure failures may have played a role in three recent derailments involving oil-laden trains in northern Ontario.

Track Failures May Have Played Role In Northern Ontario Derailments, TSB Says

CSIS Helped Government Prepare For Expected Northern Gateway Protests

CSIS Helped Government Prepare For Expected Northern Gateway Protests
OTTAWA — Canada's spy agency helped senior federal officials figure out how to deal with protests expected last summer in response to resource and energy development issues — including a pivotal decision on the Northern Gateway pipeline.

CSIS Helped Government Prepare For Expected Northern Gateway Protests