Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mail Service Halted In Ottawa As Commons Takes Up Back-To-Work Bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2018 01:35 PM
    OTTAWA — Mail service came to a halt in Ottawa on Friday as the House of Commons took up back-to-work legislation tabled by the Liberal government.
     
     
    The capital, as well as smaller towns in Ontario and British Columbia, and Sherbrooke, Que., are the latest targets of rotating strikes by Canadian Union of Postal Workers.
     
     
    On Thursday, Labour Minister Patty Hajdu tabled a bill to end mail disruptions across the country and argued the government had a responsibility protect all Canadians and businesses that drive the economy.
     
     
    The move has been condemned by CUPW and the Canadian Labour Congress, who say the legislation puts the Liberal government at odds with the labour movement as a whole.
     
     
    "The right to strike is an integral part of the collective bargaining process," said CLC president Hassan Yussuff. "Without it, an employer has no incentive to bargain in good faith, and workers have no recourse to demand a fair process."
     
     
    Canada Post seems to have convinced Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that Christmas wouldn't come without a back-to-work bill, added CUPW president Mike Palecek.
     
     
    "The mail was moving, and people know it," he said. "People have been getting their mail and online orders delivered. That was the point of our rotating strike tactics, not to pick a fight with the public."
     
     
    Members of Palecek's union have held rotating walkouts for a month, causing massive backlogs of unsorted mail and packages at postal depots, though Canada Post and the union dispute how big the pileup is.
     
     
    Canada Post says it could take weeks — even stretching into 2019 — to clear the backlog that has built up, especially at major sorting centres in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.
     
     
    CUPW's 50,000 members, in two groups, are demanding better pay for rural and suburban carriers, more job security and minimum guaranteed hours.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary
    DARPAN is all set to present the most-exciting event of the year in Surrey – Darpan Magazine’s Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2018. 

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before
    A bevy of women named Nicole at the University of Calgary have united thanks to a mass email from a young man on a quest to locate his missed connection.

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School
    Halifax police are investigating several incidents of what they say is graphic and offensive graffiti in Dartmouth.

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital
    A Manitoba truck driver who was covered in hot tar when his semi truck rolled in North Dakota is being remembered as a fighter.

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court
    "Indeed, no European countries, for example, grant an unqualified automatic citizenship by birth and they have no obligation to do so," the federal submission says.

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.
    NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — U.S. officials say a Kitchener, Ont., woman was arrested after allegedly assaulting a border officer at the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.