Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada Post to start taking commercial mail again

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2024 11:14 AM
  • Canada Post to start taking commercial mail again

Canada Post has started accepting commercial volumes of letters and parcels as it works to get back to normal operations following a month-long strike.

However, the postal service has warned that Canadians should expect delays into the new year as it deals with the backlog of mail.

"With a large, integrated network of processing plants, depots and post offices across the country, stabilizing operations will take time," it said in a release.

"We remind all Canadians to expect delivery delays through the remainder of 2024 and into January 2025."

Postal workers went back on the job Tuesday where they began to process pending mail and accept new shipments from customers.

Along with accepting commercial volumes starting Thursday, it says small business customers can now drop off parcels at all Canada Post facilities.

Canada Post said mail is being processed on a first-in, first-out basis, and it will start accepting new international mail on Dec. 23.

While shipments are slowly moving again, the damage is already done for many retailers, said Matt Poirier, vice-president of federal government relations for the Retail Council of Canada.

“The Christmas boom of sales was not fully realized this year,” he said.

The GST tax holiday is helping offset some of the hit, but the busiest shopping window has already closed, he said.

“It's just unfortunate that the period before the tax holiday kicked in, which is typically the best time of year for retail, was upended.”

The Canada Post strike saw other shippers see a spike in volume, leading some to put restrictions in place including not accepting parcels from smaller carriers.

FedEx said Thursday it had lifted the five package drop-off limit it had instituted to manage the higher demand. 

The shipping company said it had also added midnight sort operations at multiple Canadian hubs and is evaluating unscheduled pick-up requests daily based on local market conditions.

More than 55,000 employees were ordered back to work by the Canada Industrial Relations Board after it determined a deal could not be reached before the end of the year. 

The Crown corporation and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers had been deadlocked in negotiations, with federal mediation on pause as key issues like wages and weekend expansion seemed to see no movement. 

Now, the government has appointed an industrial inquiry commission to come up with recommendations by May 15 on how a new agreement can be reached, while the existing contracts have been extended to May 22.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man charged in Metrotown mall arson

Man charged in Metrotown mall arson
Mounties in Burnaby say a suspect has now been charged for an arson that happened in 2023. Police say a 33-year-old man is accused of setting fire to a loading bay at a business in Metrotown mall in February last year.

Man charged in Metrotown mall arson

IHIT identifies victim in Langley shooting

IHIT identifies victim in Langley shooting
Homicide investigators are identifying the victim of a deadly shooting in Langley earlier this month in the hopes to further their investigation. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 41-year-old Dillan Unger of Langley was the person killed on August 2nd. 

IHIT identifies victim in Langley shooting

Massive Vancouver blaze that likely caused crane collapse is contained: Fire service

Massive Vancouver blaze that likely caused crane collapse is contained: Fire service
Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services says it has extinguished a blaze that destroyed an apartment building under construction, damaged nine nearby homes and appears to have caused a crane to collapse. The fire in Vancouver's west side broke out late Tuesday in a six-story building and spread to several nearby houses. 

Massive Vancouver blaze that likely caused crane collapse is contained: Fire service

Audit of BC Timber Sales program finds issues with road and bridge maintenance

Audit of BC Timber Sales program finds issues with road and bridge maintenance
The Forest Practices Board says an audit of the BC Timber Sales program and timber sales license holders in the Boundary region found "significant issues" with road and bridge maintenance. It says the board conducted a "full scope compliance audit" of all activities between June 2022 and June 2023 in the Kootenay Business Area in south-central B.C. along Highway 3.

Audit of BC Timber Sales program finds issues with road and bridge maintenance

B.C. to see a return to seasonable temperatures, but wildfire risk remains

B.C. to see a return to seasonable temperatures, but wildfire risk remains
The director of provincial operations for the BC Wildfire Service says the province has seen about 10,000 lightning strikes over the last seven days, primarily in the Kamloops Fire Centre and Southeast Fire Centres. Cliff Chapman says because B.C. had a hot and dry July, those lightning strikes have the ability and the fuel to start new fires.

B.C. to see a return to seasonable temperatures, but wildfire risk remains

Highway 1 shuts down in Chilliwack after fatal collision

Highway 1 shuts down in Chilliwack after fatal collision
On Tuesday at approximately 2:45 pm, BC Highway Patrol (BCHP) and Chilliwack RCMP responded to a multi-vehicle incident on Highway 1 near Yale Road West in Chilliwack. The highway has been shut down eastbound and currently has a single lane open westbound.

Highway 1 shuts down in Chilliwack after fatal collision