Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

CN Rail-Unifor reach agreement to avert lockout of 4,800 hundred workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2015 10:48 AM

    OTTAWA — A lockout of about 4,800 Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) workers was avoided late Monday when the company and Unifor reached a tentative contract settlement.

    The agreement was reached less than an hour after the railway’s 11 p.m. ET deadline to lock out mechanical, intermodal and clerical workers.

    Negotiations between the two sides had resumed Monday morning with the help of federal mediation advisers and continued beyond the late-night deadline.

    Unifor president Jerry Dias told The Canadian Press that the deal "came together when the company realized that the government was not going to interfere."

    "Once the company realized that they had to negotiate an agreement with us, then things fell into place," he said in a telephone interview.

    Dias said federal Labour Minister Kellie Leitch played an important role by telling the two sides they had to negotiate a settlement.

    "The company was going to push a lockout and the facts are that the government was not going to interfere," said Dias.

    Leitch issued a statement after the deal was struck saying she was "very pleased" that an agreement was reached to eliminate any threat to the Canadian economy.

    "I know that it will benefit not only the parties involved but all Canadians. I firmly believe that the best solution is always the one that the parties reach themselves," she said.

    In a separate statement, CN president and CEO Claude Mongeau said the railway was also very pleased that both sides found common ground on a tentative contract.

    "This settlement forecloses the prospect of a potential labour disruption that would have harmed CN's employees, its customers and the Canadian economy," he said.

    The Montreal-based railway had said it planned to lock out the workers unless Unifor agreed to binding arbitration to settle contract differences.

    Dias had spoken out firmly against binding arbitration in the belief that CN and Unifor could reach a settlement on their own.

    "If we can't find a solution, then shame on us. We don't need somebody else to stick their nose in our business. We should be able to settle it ourselves."

    Unifor said ratification meetings would be held across the country over the next three weeks. It said details of the agreement will only be disclosed after ratification.

    Last week, the threat of federal legislation prompted CP Rail and the Teamsters to end a one day strike by 3,300 locomotive engineers and other train workers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. police watchdog probe death of shootout suspect

    B.C. police watchdog probe death of shootout suspect
    SLOCAN CITY, B.C. - British Columbia's police watchdog is investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of a suspect who triggered an extensive manhunt in the southern community of Slocan.

    B.C. police watchdog probe death of shootout suspect

    Montreal's French Invasion: Immigrants From France Flock To The City

    Montreal's French Invasion: Immigrants From France Flock To The City
    MONTREAL - When Christian Faure moved to Montreal last summer, the renowned chef saw a chance to start fresh in a new city, freed from the constraints of his native France.

    Montreal's French Invasion: Immigrants From France Flock To The City

    Lawyers oppose release of murder conviction assessment in Nova Scotia case

    Lawyers oppose release of murder conviction assessment in Nova Scotia case
    HALIFAX - The lawyer for a Nova Scotia man whose murder conviction is being reviewed by Ottawa argued in court today against a media application for the release of a preliminary assessment of the case.

    Lawyers oppose release of murder conviction assessment in Nova Scotia case

    Study finds Canadians are still paying too much for generic drugs

    Study finds Canadians are still paying too much for generic drugs
    OTTAWA - A new study has found that Canadians are still paying far more than other industrialized countries for generic drugs, despite recent efforts by the provinces and territories to bulk buy six particularly costly medications.

    Study finds Canadians are still paying too much for generic drugs

    Nicholson, Lawson talk Islamic State campaign with U.S. officials at White House

    Nicholson, Lawson talk Islamic State campaign with U.S. officials at White House
    OTTAWA - The country's top military commander is representing Canada at a White House meeting where U.S. President Barack Obama will discuss the unfolding campaign against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

    Nicholson, Lawson talk Islamic State campaign with U.S. officials at White House

    No shortage of finger-pointing as inquiry set to report on deadly mall collapse

    No shortage of finger-pointing as inquiry set to report on deadly mall collapse
    When Commissioner Paul Belanger reports this week on the deadly collapse of a mall in northern Ontario, he and his team will have spent months sorting through numerous claims, counterclaims and finger-pointing as to who was to blame for the tragedy.

    No shortage of finger-pointing as inquiry set to report on deadly mall collapse