The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Unifor members vote to end refinery lockout

Agreement ensures peaceful transition after bitter labour dispute

- ARTHUR WHITE-CRUMMEY

REGINA — Members of Unifor Local 594 overwhelmi­ngly voted to ratify a deal with Co-op Refinery Complex (CRC), sending 730 workers back to the job after a bitter lock-out that gripped the city for almost seven months.

Kevin Bittman, president of the local, said 89 per cent of voting members supported ratificati­on. That’s the same margin by which they rejected a deal in April, after the company forced a vote on what it called its final offer.

The only difference was the addition of a “return to work agreement” to protect members from terminatio­n based on their role in the dispute, according to Bittman. It sets out an expedited process to deal with grievances about wrongful dismissal.

Bittman said there were fears the company would come after those active in the dispute, which was marked by picket lines, arrests and court injunction­s.

“There’s reports that they wanted to fire a whole bunch of people, and we were not going to go into that plant with them being able to fire people and take four and a half years to get through arbitratio­n, because the process is broken in Saskatchew­an,” said Bittman.

He dared the company to try it out on him. “They’ve tried five times already,” he said. “So if they want to come after me more, come after me more.”

Bittman said the agreement will ensure a peaceful transition as Unifor members return to work over the coming weeks.

But the union couldn’t get the company to budge from its position on pensions, which called for contributi­ons of four per cent from employees as of ratificati­on. That’s set to go up to 8 per cent effective Feb. 1, 2022. It could be 9.75 per cent or higher the year after that.

The company’s final offer included the national pattern on wages, which amounts to an 11.75 per cent increase over four years, followed by negotiated hikes for three more years of at least one per cent.

Workers were locked out on Dec. 5 last year and have remained off the job since. The announceme­nt that a tentative deal had been reached came on Thursday, as workers demonstrat­ed at the Saskatchew­an Legislativ­e Building to call on Premier Scott Moe to impose a binding settlement based on a more favourable mediators report.

In a statement, the CRC welcomed the ratificati­on vote, which it framed as a “much-needed balance between the company’s appreciati­on for our unionized employees and the fiscal realities of the refining sector.”

“This labour disruption was a difficult period in our history, but I believe that we will emerge from this a stronger team and organizati­on,” said a statement attributed to Gil Le Dressay, vice president of refinery operations.

“The Union has been our partner in fuelling Western Canada for more than 75 years, and they will be our partner for generation­s into the future.”

Though the union took concession­s on virtually every element of the deal, Bittman refused to view it as a defeat. The union, after all, is still alive to fight another day.

“This was union busting at its finest,” he said. “We’re just happy that we came out with our heads held high and we’re going to go back there and try and build a relationsh­ip.”

 ?? BRANDON HARDER • POSTMEDIA ?? Unifor 594 president Kevin Bittman, centre, speaks to members of his local in front of the Saskatchew­an Legislativ­e Building in Regina, Sask., on June 18.
BRANDON HARDER • POSTMEDIA Unifor 594 president Kevin Bittman, centre, speaks to members of his local in front of the Saskatchew­an Legislativ­e Building in Regina, Sask., on June 18.

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