Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Press Operators And Mechanics Locked Out At Halifax's Chronicle Herald

The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2015 02:12 PM
    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's largest newspaper has locked out its unionized printing plant employees after contract negotiations failed to reach an agreement.
     
    Thirteen press operators and mechanics at the Halifax Chronicle Herald were locked out Saturday, the company said in a news release. It said the employees had turned down a proposal from management.
     
    The proposal included concessions on retirement and job security but did not include cuts to pay or benefits, the company's statement said.
     
    The workers' union said the employees had already agreed to negotiate concessions when they were locked out.
     
    The employees decided they were willing to take monetary concessions shortly before the lockout, the Halifax Typographical Union said in a news release.
     
    "I have never heard of a company locking out workers offering to negotiate concessions," said Martin O'Hanlon, president of the union's parent organization, CWA Canada.
     
    The union said the Chronicle Herald wants to freeze wages in a four-year agreement. It also says the company is seeking concessions on early retirement that would contradict a binding commitment from 2007.
     
    The company said it needed concessions because it is dealing with a decline in advertising and circulation revenue.
     
    "We were looking to ensure an agreement that reduced the strain on the company while protecting our employees," company spokeswoman Nancy Cook said in the release.
     
    The statement said the workers' annual pay and benefits are a minimum of $66,000.
     
    The union has said it is willing to return to negotiations immediately, but the company said there are no further meetings scheduled.
     
    The paper printed a statement Friday saying a work stoppage would not affect its daily delivery.
     
    Last fall the Chronicle Herald announced it had given layoff notices to 20 unionized employees. The layoffs were an effort to save money in reaction to a changing industry and a decline in advertising, the paper said at the time.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Translations And Aids On The Docket For Multicultural Victims Of Crime In B.C.

    Translations And Aids On The Docket For Multicultural Victims Of Crime In B.C.
    VANCOUVER — The federal government is extending a hand to victims of crime in B.C. that may have had difficulty accessing support because of language or other cultural barriers.

    Translations And Aids On The Docket For Multicultural Victims Of Crime In B.C.

    Overriding Top Court's Assisted-death Ruling Like 'Nuclear Bomb': Peter Mackay

    Overriding Top Court's Assisted-death Ruling Like 'Nuclear Bomb': Peter Mackay
    VANCOUVER — Justice Minister Peter MacKay has acknowledged the landmark Supreme Court of Canada ruling on doctor-assisted death could move votes during the upcoming fall election.

    Overriding Top Court's Assisted-death Ruling Like 'Nuclear Bomb': Peter Mackay

    Grant Strate, Veteran Dancer And Choreographer, Dies In Vancouver

    Grant Strate, Veteran Dancer And Choreographer, Dies In Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Canadian dance great Grant Strate has died. The National Ballet of Canada says Strate died in his Vancouver home on Monday. He was 87.

    Grant Strate, Veteran Dancer And Choreographer, Dies In Vancouver

    Former Jets Coach Noel Back At 'Hockey University' With WHL's Vancouver Giants

    Former Jets Coach Noel Back At 'Hockey University' With WHL's Vancouver Giants
    The former head coach of the Winnipeg Jets joined the Western Hockey League's Vancouver Giants in December and saw an opportunity to not only turn around a struggling team, but also retool his own skills behind the bench.

    Former Jets Coach Noel Back At 'Hockey University' With WHL's Vancouver Giants

    Fifty Shades Of Inappropriate: Middle School Students Get Word Search Puzzles Of Erotic Movie

    Fifty Shades Of Inappropriate: Middle School Students Get Word Search Puzzles Of Erotic Movie
    MONESSEN, Pa. — Parents in a Pennsylvania school district are turning 50 shades of red over word search puzzles given to their middle school students based on an erotic novel and movie.

    Fifty Shades Of Inappropriate: Middle School Students Get Word Search Puzzles Of Erotic Movie

    All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit

    All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit
    TORONTO — A teenager left paralyzed after falling from a favourite climbing tree in a public park has no grounds to sue the municipality, Ontario's top court has ruled.

    All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit