Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. union representing Lower Mainland transit workers issues 72-hour strike notice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jan, 2024 10:50 AM
  • B.C. union representing Lower Mainland transit workers issues 72-hour strike notice

A union representing more than 180 transit workers in B.C. has issued a 72-hour strike notice.

CUPE Local 4500 represents workers employed by the Coast Mountain Bus Company, which runs transit operations for all of Metro Vancouver.

The notice is effective at 8 a.m. local time on Wednesday.

The union says it is still available to negotiate a collective agreement that avoids service disruptions.

It says job action could begin at 8 a.m. on Saturday with an overtime ban that would affect all operations in the Coast Mountain system.

The union says the last collective agreement expired at the end of 2022 and bargaining didn't start until this past October.

Members voted 100 per cent in favour of a strike mandate last month.

"We regard job action as the last resort in our effort to reach a fair deal, but we don't see an alternative," Chris Gindhu, president of CUPE Local 4500, said in a statement. "To date, Coast Mountain has been unwilling to address our key issues."

Coast Mountain Bus Company President and General Manager Michael McDaniel said in a statement that the company has offered CUPE Local 4500 the same basic wage increase that was already agreed to by all other CMBC employees.

"This offer is consistent with other public sector settlements in British Columbia. We urge the union to return to the bargaining table to finalize a deal," said McDaniel.

The company says it does not anticipate the union’s potential overtime ban to impact transit services at this time.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada
The B.C. Wildfire Service says heavy equipment, helicopters and crews are attacking what is believed to be a human-caused fire. The wildfire service is reporting more than 80 active fires in British Columbia.

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP
The crash on Highway 3 last Wednesday involved three vehicles, but police say those who died were all in a Chevrolet Suburban.  RCMP say the collision analysis and reconstruction service is still investigating the crash. 

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space
B-C Ferries is asking for the public's help in deciding what to do with its former buffet spaces on its Tsawwassen-Swartz Bay route. It says an online survey will be open for three weeks and, using that feedback, it hopes to transform the space this fall.  

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge
Mounties in Ridge Meadows say they are investigating an assault at a local school. They say officers responded to the incident at a school at 116-B Avenue around 9:40 P-M on Saturday – outside of regular school hours.

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge

What the interest rate hike means for mortgage holders, home hunters

What the interest rate hike means for mortgage holders, home hunters
The hike is aimed at quelling inflation, which has proved stubborn, not moving down quickly enough toward the central bank's target of two per cent. However, the hike is also bound to weigh on those hunting for homes or holding mortgages.

What the interest rate hike means for mortgage holders, home hunters

BOC boosts key interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.75 per cent, highest since 2001

BOC boosts key interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.75 per cent, highest since 2001
As the economy continues to outperform expectations, the Bank of Canada has chosen to act sooner rather than later to clamp down on inflation, raising interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday. Its key interest rate now sits at 4.75 per cent, the highest it’s been since 2001.

BOC boosts key interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.75 per cent, highest since 2001