Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fraser Valley bus drivers give strike notice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2023 06:09 PM
  • Fraser Valley bus drivers give strike notice

ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - The union representing transit bus drivers in B.C.'s Fraser Valley has given a 72-hour strike notice and could stop collecting fares starting Thursday.

CUPE 561 served the strike notice to First Transit, the contracted company that operates B.C. Transit services in Chilliwack, Abbotsford and the surrounding region.

The union says it will be in a legal strike position as of 3 p.m. on Thursday, at which point drivers will stop collecting fares.

A statement says two days of full service withdrawal, excluding HandyDART services, are slated for Feb. 27 and 28, with "further escalation anticipated in the weeks to follow if a deal cannot be reached."

The union says members make 32 per cent less than transit workers across the Lower Mainland, with no pension plan and long hours of standby time for which they receive less than $3 per hour.

First Transit did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The union has 213 members including drivers, utility workers, bus washers and mechanics.

It says the two sides have engaged in more than 20 days of bargaining since talks began in late spring 2022.

“Our members are seeking a fair deal, one that pays them what other transit operators are currently being paid," local union president Jane Gibbons said in a statement. "It doesn’t make any sense that those in the Fraser Valley should be asked to do the same job for less than everyone else."

MORE National ARTICLES

Covid disrupted economic integration of many immigrants: Statistics Canada

Covid disrupted economic integration of many immigrants: Statistics Canada
From 2016 to 2021, immigrants contributed to four-fifths of labour force growth in Canada, but when the pandemic first hit, recent immigrants were more likely to transition out of employment than their Canadian-born counterparts due to lockdowns. 

Covid disrupted economic integration of many immigrants: Statistics Canada

B.C. finance minister out in cabinet shuffle

B.C. finance minister out in cabinet shuffle
Robinson announced just last month that the government had a surplus windfall of $5.7 billion dollars, allowing Eby to spend on his priorities of housing, health care and public safety. With tears in her eyes, Niki Sharma stepped up to sign on as the new attorney general, taking over Eby’s job.

B.C. finance minister out in cabinet shuffle

Mint commemorates Queen with black-ringed toonie

Mint commemorates Queen with black-ringed toonie
The mint says the coin's black outer ring is intended to evoke a "mourning armband" to honour the queen, who died in September after 70 years on the throne. The mint says it will start to circulate nearly five million of the coins this month, and they will gradually appear as banks restock inventories.

Mint commemorates Queen with black-ringed toonie

Bank Of Canada raises interest rate to 4.25%

Bank Of Canada raises interest rate to 4.25%
Overall, the data since the October MPR support the Bank’s outlook that growth will essentially stall through the end of this year and the first half of next year. CPI inflation remained at 6.9% in October, with many of the goods and services Canadians regularly buy showing large price increases.

Bank Of Canada raises interest rate to 4.25%

B.C. woman injured in targeted shooting: police

B.C. woman injured in targeted shooting: police
She was taken to hospital for treatment by BC Emergency Health Services. Police say they believe the attack was not related to the Lower Mainland gang conflict. Police do not believe there is a risk to the public.  

B.C. woman injured in targeted shooting: police

Nature 'under attack,' says PM Trudeau

Nature 'under attack,' says PM Trudeau
Over the next 14 days, negotiators from all 196 countries in the world are being asked to hammer out an agreement to both end and begin to restore the ecosystems we have destroyed and damaged.

Nature 'under attack,' says PM Trudeau