The Niagara Falls Review

Unions block trucks at Canada Post depot over legislatio­n

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OTTAWA — Canada Post employees have been legislated back to work after more than five weeks of rotating strikes, but that isn’t stopping their brethren from picking up picket signs to support them — and once again slowing the mail in the process.

Just after the federal government passed a law this week forcing an end to strikes by Canadian Union of Postal Workers members, the union warned that other unions could act out in response.

And on Wednesday, they did just that.

CUPW says several major unions in British Columbia set up picket lines at the Pacific Processing Centre in Vancouver.

The protesters said they would allow workers into the facility, which is the third-largest postal sorting plant in the country, but trucks with mail would not be allowed in or out.

CUPW national president Mike Palecek says while his 50,000 members are prohibited from picketing, other union members face no similar restrictio­ns.

“What we’re seeing in Vancouver today is that instead of resolving our dispute with Canada

Post, the Trudeau government has picked a fight with labour,” Palecek said in a statement. “‘An injury to one is an injury to all’ is much more than a slogan.”

The union has called the backto-work legislatio­n, Bill C-89, unconstitu­tional.

The legislatio­n became law late Monday, forcing postal workers back to work Tuesday while an arbitratio­n process is launched to try to settle the contract difference­s between Canada Post and its major union.

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