Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Post Lockout Deadline Extended Until Monday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2016 12:06 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada Post is extending its lockout notice to Monday at 12:01 a.m. ET and says it is willing to submit to binding arbitration in an effort to resolve the ongoing labour dispute.
     
    In a statement late Wednesday, the Crown corporation said is was extending its deadline, which had been Friday, in the hopes the Canadian Union of Postal Workers would also agree to binding arbitration.
     
    However, there are no talks planned and Canada Post spokesman Jon Hamilton said earlier Wednesday the two sides couldn't be further apart.
     
    Canada Post and the union remain at loggerheads on CUPW's request for wage increases for rural mail carriers and the pension changes Canada Post says it needs to reduce costs.
     
    The fractious relationship between the Crown corporation and the union, which represents about 50,000 staff at Canada Post, should have come as no surprise to the government.
     
    Public Services Minister Judy Foote was warned three months ago that contract negotiations between Canada Post and CUPW were likely to lead to a strike or lockout, with officials advising the government to avoid taking sides in bargaining.
     
    Foote was told in an April briefing note that negotiations "will likely be long and arduous" and that they "may lead to labour disruptions as has occurred in about half of previous negotiations between parties."
     
    The briefing material, previously released under the Access to Information Act, suggests that Foote meet with the union, but not talk about contract negotiations that were underway for fear of looking to favour one side over the other.
     
    Officials told Foote she should only meet with the union's president to talk about a sweeping review of Canada Post that will look at every aspect of the Crown corporation to see what services it should keep, which ones it should ditch, and whether to keep the community mailboxes that have frustrated homeowners who lost door-to-door mail service.
     
     
    Canada Post had earlier threatened to suspend the collective agreement as of Friday, but it was unclear if it would do so in light of the extended lockout notice.
     
    Workers would still be on the job and receiving wages and benefits under labour laws, but the contract suspension would give Canada Post the option of triggering a work stoppage by locking out employees.
     
    The union has vowed not to go on strike, creating a stare-down between the two parties with one side waiting for the other to blink.
     
    One business expert says he expects the mail will stop flowing after Friday — it's just a matter of how long the labour disruption goes on before there's an agreement, or the government gets involved.
     
    Tom Knight, an associate professor in the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia, said it looks like Canada Post is "prepared to pull the trigger on a work stoppage" as neither side is "interested in blinking."
     
    Already, private courier companies are seeing a bump in business.
     
    A lockout "has the potential to be drawn out because I do believe both sides are quite committed," said Knight, a labour relations expert.
     
    The sticking points include the union's proposal for a pay increase for its rural, mostly female carriers. The union says they earn 28 per cent less than their urban, mostly male, counterparts.
     
     
    Canada Post has said CUPW's demands are "not affordable" and would add $1 billion in costs over the life of a new contract just as the postal service undergoes a review of operations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation
    OTTAWA — Canada's border agency is pulling the plug on the controversial reality TV program "Border Security" after the federal privacy commissioner found the agency violated the rights of a construction worker filmed during a raid in Vancouver.

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby
    VANCOUVER — Mark Anscombe saw some of the same issues that plagued his predecessor bubble to the surface in his debut as head coach of the Canadian men's rugby team.

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?
    With medically assisted death now legal in Canada, doctors need access to specific drugs that will painlessly and humanely terminate a suffering patient's life.

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment
    Women first accused Canadian Olympic Committee president Marcel Aubut of sexual harassment last October and he was forced to resign, although he has not faced any charges.

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids
    CALGARY — British Columbia's child advocate says the death of a diabetic teen in Alberta demonstrates gaping cracks in interprovincial child welfare  that put kids at risk.

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids

    Who Killed Tim Bosma? Three Story Lines Emerged During The 4-month Trial

    Who Killed Tim Bosma? Three Story Lines Emerged During The 4-month Trial
    HAMILTON — A jury in Hamilton begins contemplating the fate this week of two men accused of killing Tim Bosma and torching his body in an animal incinerator dubbed "The Eliminator."

    Who Killed Tim Bosma? Three Story Lines Emerged During The 4-month Trial