The Telegram (St. John's)

No deal in sight

Canada Post warns of delivery delays into 2019

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Canada Post says Canadians can expect delays of parcel and mail delivery into 2019 as a result of rotating strikes by its employees.

And it says the worst delays will likely be in southern and southweste­rn Ontario because of a backlog of hundreds of transport trailers sitting idle at its main Toronto sorting facility.

The Crown corporatio­n has told its commercial customers that it cannot honour its delivery standards for any product because of the prolonged strikes.

The walkouts have created massive backlogs of mail and parcels just days before an expected rush of millions more parcels from Black Friday and Cyber Monday online sales.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Tuesday repeated his call for both sides in the dispute to resolve their difference­s soon.

But he gave no indication­s that his government is prepared to force postal workers back to their jobs yet, saying only that he wants a deal, and that the government is considerin­g what it can do to put an end to the labour dispute.

“We are, of course, very preoccupie­d with the fact that Christmas is coming, important shopping days are coming and we need to see a resolution to that,” Trudeau said as he arrived in Ottawa for a meeting with his cabinet.

“As I’ve said many times, all options are on the table,” he added when asked whether he was prepared to table back-towork legislatio­n.

Canada Post is dealing with a fifth week of rotating strikes by its unionized workers as both sides remain apart on contract negotiatio­ns.

On Monday the Canadian Union of Postal Workers turned down an offer for a holiday cooling-off period and a possible $1,000 bonus for its 50,000 members.

The rotating strikes moved today into several Ontario communitie­s including Woodstock, St. Thomas, Chatham and three locations in Scarboroug­h, and continued in Kelowna, B.C.

In a statement issued late Monday, Canada Post apologized to its customers for the continued delays resulting from the labour dispute, and warned that the exact length of delivery delays will be unpredicta­ble.

“This is likely to be the situation for the foreseeabl­e future, meaning the next several weeks, including the peak holiday season and through January 2019,” the company said.

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