Regina Leader-Post

UNION, REFINERY IN COURT

Ruling reserved on picket tactics

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A nearly three-week labour dispute between a Saskatchew­an petroleum refinery and hundreds of its workers moved from the picket line into the courtroom Monday, with the company seeking an injunction against some of the union’s activities.

Eileen Libby, a lawyer for the Federated Co-operatives Limited, told court that picketers with Unifor Local 594 have been blocking access to the Co-op Refinery Complex in Regina and intimidati­ng replacemen­t workers, contractor­s and suppliers.

Libby said there’s been a lack of action from city police, and the court is the only place the company could turn to stop the union from engaging in what she called illegal conduct.

“The union does not have a right, no matter what it says in arguments, to block the employer’s access to its own premises,” she argued.

Union lawyer Crystal Norbeck questioned the allegation­s of unlawful conduct and argued there should be no restrictio­ns on picketing.

“If the company can simply hire replacemen­t workers at will and those workers have free access to the work site, there’s no economic pressure at all,” she told the court. “The right to picket is meaningles­s.”

More than 700 refinery workers have been locked out since the start of the month, after Unifor received a strike mandate and issued a notice for job action.

Pensions are a key issue in the contract dispute.

Last week, Justice Janet Mcmurtry put some restrictio­ns on the union’s picketing until a full injunction hearing could be held. The judge reserved her decision Monday.

Her interim order restrains the members of Unifor Local 594 from “impeding, obstructin­g or interferin­g with the ingress or egress to or from the applicant’s (CRC) property, except for the purpose of conveying informatio­n and/or soliciting support to a maximum of five minutes.”

Unifor is calling for a national boycott of the facility’s owner, Federated Co-operatives Ltd., made up of more than 190 independen­t retail co-operatives in Western Canada, operating food stores, gas bars, convenienc­e stores and home centres.

The workers’ last contract expired in February. The union declared an impasse in contract negotiatio­ns in September, which led to the appointmen­t of a mediator.

Union blockades have impeded the delivery of safety equipment and chemicals to the refinery and have raised concerns about the ability of emergency vehicles to get through, Libby told court.

As a result of the union blockades, the co-op brought in helicopter­s to transport goods and staff across picket lines.

They think they’ve got a law-given right to carry on business without interrupti­on — that’s what they think.

“Think about that for a moment: what a significan­t act that is,” Libby said.

“It’s expensive. It’s strange, but it was necessary.”

The union, however, said emergency vehicles have not been prevented from accessing the property.

Union lawyer Rick Engel said the company is wealthy enough to fly in replacemen­t workers, and those on the picket lines have a right to obstruct access as a point of protest.

“They think they’ve got a law-given right to carry on business without interrupti­on — that’s what they think.”

He also told the court that police have been doing their jobs by keeping the peace and not taking sides in the dispute.

The Canadian Press with files from the Leader-post

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 ?? BRANDON HARDER ?? Unifor workers, who are currently locked out of the Co-op Refinery Complex, picket earlier this month while disrupting the flow of traffic in and out of the complex at an entrance on Fleet Street.
BRANDON HARDER Unifor workers, who are currently locked out of the Co-op Refinery Complex, picket earlier this month while disrupting the flow of traffic in and out of the complex at an entrance on Fleet Street.

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