National Post (National Edition)

Arbitrator awards rural carriers pay hike

- Terry Pedwell

OTTAWA • Rural and suburban postal workers across Canada celebrated Thursday after an arbitrator ordered Canada Post to pay them more — much more — as part of a long-awaited pay equity decision.

For a majority of the Crown agency’s mostlyfema­le rural and suburban carriers, known as RSMCS, the ruling translates into a 25-per-cent pay hike, plus some increased benefits, Canada Post spokesman Jon Hamilton said.

Not including benefits, the pay increase amounts to as much as $13,000 annually, retroactiv­e to the beginning of 2016, said Canadian Union of Postal Workers representa­tive Cathy Kennedy.

“We’re very happy with (the ruling),” said Kennedy, who was one of three members of the union’s pay equity committee.

Arbitrator Maureen Flynn issued the ruling to Canada Post and CUPW after the two sides failed to reach an agreement through mediated talks by an Aug. 30 deadline.

The union argued Canada Post’s 8,000 rural carriers — most of whom are women — were being paid substantia­lly less than their majority-male urban co-workers. About 60 per cent of RSMCS are women.

Thechairof­canadapost’s board of directors and interim president and CEO, Jessica Mcdonald, pledged to move quickly to implement the pay changes and called Flynn’s ruling “thoughtful and detailed.”

“This is an incredibly important ruling for our rural and suburban carriers,” McDonald said in a statement.

“Pay equity is a basic human right and therefore pay disparity on the basis of gender is wholly unacceptab­le for Canada Post.”

In a preliminar­y 176-page decision issued in May, Flynnlarge­lysidedwit­hthe union over how Canada Post should calculate compensati­on rates for its rural workers, calling the corporatio­n’s methodolog­y “not reasonably accurate.”

Thursday’s ruling came as CUPW and the post office continued to negotiate new contracts under a Sept. 25 deadline for a strike or lockout, with the aid of a third party.

Canada Post indicated late last month that settling the pay-equity dispute could cost the corporatio­n upwards of one-quarter of a billion dollars when it posted a secondquar­ter loss before taxes of $242 million.

The figure was a dramatic drop from the $27 million profit the agency recorded during the same period in 2017.

The corporatio­n said the losses came despite a nearly 20 per cent increase in second quarter parcel revenues over the same threemonth segment in the previous year.

Canada Post said Thursday that a full accounting of thecostoft­hepayequit­ydecision would be included in its third-quarter results.

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