Saskatoon StarPhoenix

CN strike has big ripple effect on economy

- KELSEY JOHNSON and ALLISON LAMPERT

OTTAWA/MONTREAL A prolonged strike at Canadian National Railway Co, the country’s largest railroad, sent further shocks through the economy on Monday with grain shipments scuttled and layoffs planned at fertilizer producers and an auto shipment terminal.

As Canada’s biggest rail strike in a decade entered its seventh day, industry kept pressuring the government to intervene.

Teamsters Canada, the union representi­ng the 3,200 striking CN employees, said it was no closer to an agreement than when its members first hit picket lines.

Unifor labour union said 70 employees would be laid off effective Thursday at a Nova Scotia facility contracted by CN to handle vehicles shipped in and out of Canada.

Meanwhile, about 300 farmers facing propane shortages dumped wet corn in front of the prime minister’s local Quebec office and pleaded for the government to intervene. Striking conductors and yard workers are demanding improved working conditions, including worker rest breaks. The federal government has sidesteppe­d industry calls to force employees back to work, insisting collective bargaining is a quicker solution.

“Every option (is) always on the table, but for the time being we hope that both parties will get to an agreement and that will be the fastest way,” Agricultur­e Minister Marie-claude Bibeau told reporters in Saskatchew­an.

Canada relies on CN and Canadian Pacific Railway to move products like crops, oil, potash, coal and other manufactur­ed goods to ports and the U.S. Industry figures show about half of Canada’s exports move by rail, and economists have estimated a prolonged strike could eat into economic growth.

A CN spokesman said company officials continue to negotiate and called for binding arbitratio­n, which the union has rejected so far.

The strike left at least 35 vessels waiting at Canada’s West Coast to load grain shipments, Mark Hemmes, president of Quorum Corp, which monitors the movement of Prairie grain for the Canadian government, told Reuters. Hemmes said many of the grain handling facilities at major ports on the West Coast are serviced only by CN.

Shipments from those ports supply global markets, including Asia.

An associatio­n of Canadian exporters has declared event of delay, allowing members to avoid contract penalties due to circumstan­ces outside their control.

Nutrien Ltd said it was preparing to shut down its largest potash mine, at Rocanville, Sask., for two weeks effective Dec. 2.

The north shore of Port of Vancouver’s Burrard Inlet is home to a major potash and coal export terminal as well as grain terminals operated by Cargill and Richardson Internatio­nal that are normally serviced only by CN.

A “trickle of cars” from CP was reaching the grain terminals, but they are “for all intents and purposes shut down,” said Wade Sobkowich, executive director of the Western Grain Elevator Associatio­n. Calgary-based Pembina Pipeline Corp. said in a statement Sunday that it plans to ship propane to parts of Canada, including Quebec. Reuters

With a file from Bloomberg

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Farmers dump corn as they protest the ongoing rail strike in front of the riding office of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday in Montreal.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS Farmers dump corn as they protest the ongoing rail strike in front of the riding office of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday in Montreal.

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