The Prince George Citizen

New contract offers won’t end walkouts

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OTTAWA — Canada Post’s latest contract offers to its workers contain positives but not enough to put an end to rotating walkouts, the head of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers said Thursday.

And CUPW national president Mike Palecek won’t say whether tentative deals can be reached before a Saturday deadline set by Canada Post.

The walkouts are causing mail and parcel delivery delays across the country and holiday shopping is expected to worsen the situation by the day.

“After a year at the bargaining table, it looks like Canada Post is ready to start negotiatin­g,” Palecek said in an interview. “That being said, these offers don’t address our core issues.”

The union wants concrete proposals for dealing with an escalating number of work injuries at Canada Post – and not processes designed to punt worker safety concerns down the road, said Palecek.

“We have an injury crisis on our hands. (Canada Post) finally acknowledg­ed that,” he said. “But they can’t just kick these problems off to a committee and pretend they’re going to do something about it.”

The union has cited Labour Canada reports, which have placed postal employees ahead of longshore, transporta­tion and mining workers in reporting disabling workplace injuries – at a rate more than five times that in other federally regulated work.

Canada Post, in its latest offers to both urban and rural and suburban employees, has proposed a $10-million fund to pay for “jointly identified initiative­s” to speed up improvemen­ts to the Crown agency’s safety record and to reduce workplace injuries.

The money was included in what Canada Post calls “time-limited” offers tabled Wednesday, aimed at ending rotating strikes that have created a historic backlog of undelivere­d parcels.

Agency spokesman Jon Hamilton said the fund is “not a committee” but a way for the company and union to work together to identify ways to make the workplace safer.

Canada Post has also offered to fast-track a review of workloads to reduce overburden­ing of carriers who have seen a rapid increase in the number of parcels they have to deliver while letter volumes have declined.

The rotating walkouts continued Thursday at processing plants in Montreal and Winnipeg, as well as at smaller locations in Ontario, British Columbia, New Brunswick and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Canada Post said recent major shutdowns of parcel processing in Toronto and Vancouver have created a backlog of nearly 500 tractor-trailer loads of parcels and packages that need to be sorted – 375 trailers in Toronto and 120 as of Thursday morning in Vancouver.

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