Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two B.C. Trucking Companies Hold Out On Inking Deal With Unifor, Others Sign On

The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2015 10:00 AM
    VANCOUVER — Drivers at two Metro Vancouver trucking companies remain on strike as Unifor finalizes collective agreements with several other shipping businesses.
     
    Days of around-the-clock bargaining have led to contracts with six companies that make up roughly 75 per cent of the truck drivers represented by the union.
     
    Those collective agreements will last until 2019.
     
     
    But Unifor says shipping companies Port Transport and Harbour Link have so far refused to ratify deals that are consistent with the union's other collective agreements.
     
    The new contracts guarantee retroactive pay, improve compensation for transporting certain goods and require that companies contribute to a benefit plan for both owner-operators and company drivers.
     
    Unifor is Canada's largest private-sector union and represents more than 300,000 members across the country.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

    REGINA — Saskatchewan firefighters are asking the provincial government to make it easier for them to get treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

    Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

    Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case
     Skeletal remains found nearly nine years ago on an island off British Columbia's Sunshine Coast have been identified through DNA analysis.

    Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

    B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates

    Fierce debates over child-welfare policies and the government's deletion of potentially sensitive emails dominated the fall legislative session in British Columbia.

    B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates

    Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher

    Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher
    Bruce Archibald was searching for fossilized insects in British Columbia's southern Interior when he cracked open a rock and found a beautifully-preserved giant horntail wood-wasp.

    Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher

    Multiple Probes In Case Of Missing Former Olympic Rower And Funds' Seller Harold Backer

    VANCOUVER — At least three investigations are underway in the case of an investment dealer and former Canadian Olympic rower who has gone missing from Victoria.

    Multiple Probes In Case Of Missing Former Olympic Rower And Funds' Seller Harold Backer

    Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing

    Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing
    OTTAWA — Canadians may have been told that carbon pricing is a "job-killing tax on everything" but a new study finds the impact rather underwhelming.

    Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing