Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

No talks planned by either side in strike at two Cameco uranium facilities

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2014 10:58 AM
    SASKATOON - Production at Cameco’s McArthur River mine and Key Lake mill in Saskatchewan has now been suspended for five days as the result of a labour dispute.
     
    About 535 unionized members of the United Steelworkers Local 8914 at the uranium mining company’s two northern operations have been on strike since Saturday.
     
    Cameco (TSX:CCO) spokesman Robert Gereghty tells radio station CJLR that management made what it feels was a fair and competitive contract offer in the final hours of negotiations last week but it was rejected by the union.
     
    Union spokesman Mike Pulak says they are looking for an improved pension plan and compensation for travel, both of which the company is refusing to budge on.
     
    Pulak also says the union is unhappy Cameco asked for an additional 24 workers as part of an essential services agreement to complete some last-minute production.
     
    About 60 members of the union picketed Wednesday outside Cameco’s head office on 11th Street West in Saskatoon.
     
    “We’d rather be back at work but we’re here to support our membership, to support our bargaining committee, to support our northern members of the union as well,” says striker Tim Darke.
     
    The union members have been without a contract since December 2013.
     
    This is the first strike in Cameco’s history.
     
    Both sides say there are no new scheduled talks for contract negotiations at this time.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog
    OTTAWA - Ailing, disabled and unemployed Canadians seeking benefits face increasingly long waits to have their appeals heard, even as full-time positions on the government's woefully backlogged Social Security Tribunal remain unfilled.

    Canadians Seeking Benefits Face Long Wait as Social Security Tribunal Struggle With Massive Backlog

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial
    QUEBEC - A Canadian soldier has been accused of using a female subordinate as an "open bar" for his sexual gratification.

    Canadian Soldier Grilled By Defence At Quebec Sex-Assault Court Martial

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The leader of an organization representing Labrador Inuit is challenging the legal community to speed up the process in which aboriginal land claims wind through the courts so that generations aren't left waiting for answers.

    Speed up land claims disputes in the courts, aboriginal leader tells legal group

    Canada Commits Cargo Planes To Ship Arms For Kurdish Fighters In Iraq

    Canada Commits Cargo Planes To Ship Arms For Kurdish Fighters In Iraq
    OTTAWA - Two of Canada's military cargo planes will soon be ferrying weapons to Kurdish forces in northern Iraq — and the Harper government sounds prepared to do even more to counter the "barbarous attacks" of hard-line Islamic militants.

    Canada Commits Cargo Planes To Ship Arms For Kurdish Fighters In Iraq

    Fourteen-year-old Cali Bruce aims for record in long-distance charity swim to P.E.I.

    Fourteen-year-old Cali Bruce aims for record in long-distance charity swim to P.E.I.
    HALIFAX - Cali Bruce will use memories of a cousin who battled cancer to motivate her as she swims across the normally choppy waters of the Northumberland Strait on Sunday in what could be a record-breaking effort for the 14-year-old girl.

    Fourteen-year-old Cali Bruce aims for record in long-distance charity swim to P.E.I.

    Tests OK, But First Nation Wants Long-Term Studies Before Consuming Fish

    Tests OK, But First Nation Wants Long-Term Studies Before Consuming Fish
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. - Tests on water and trout in the waterways around a tailings pond breach in B.C.'s Interior remain within guidelines, but local First Nations aren't convinced the disaster won't have lasting repercussions.

    Tests OK, But First Nation Wants Long-Term Studies Before Consuming Fish