Waterloo Region Record

Special mediator hopes to end postal walkouts

In the GTA, 9,000 Canada Post union members walked off the job in part of the rotating walkouts

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — The federal government named a special mediator Wednesday in hopes of ending rotating walkouts at Canada Post that forced closure of the Crown corporatio­n’s biggest sorting plants for a second day.

Labour Minister Patty Hajdu announced the appointmen­t of Morton Mitchnick just hours after the Canadian Union of Postal Workers said it would keep its members on the picket lines in the Greater Toronto Area.

Hajdu said in a statement that Mitchnick, a former chair of the Ontario Labour Relations Board, is a highly respected senior arbitrator and mediator. She said he will be joining a team of federal mediators from the Federal Mediation and Conciliati­on Service that have been working with the two parties.

Hajdu said she hoped the new mediator would “bring a new perspectiv­e to the negotiatin­g table.”

“There are still a number of challengin­g issues that both parties have to work through, and having sometimes a fresh set of eyes on a challengin­g problem like that will help the parties to continue to look for creative solutions,” the minister said after meeting with her Liberal caucus colleagues early Wednesday.

Nearly 9,000 CUPW members walked off the job in the Toronto region early Tuesday as part of rotating walkouts that began Monday to back contract demands.

The job action at the giant Gateway parcel facility in Mississaug­a, which processes roughly two-thirds of all parcels mailed in Canada, and the South Central mail plant in the Toronto’s east end, forced delays in shipments of tens of thousands of letters and parcels across the country.

Those delays were expected to continue Wednesday, although Canada Post said it would do what it could to deliver mail and parcels outside Toronto.

“Customers across the country should expect to see delays for parcel and mail delivery,” said Canada Post spokespers­on Jon Hamilton, adding the agency continues to operate across the rest of Canada and is accepting and delivering mail and parcels in all other locations.

The union has said the walkouts will continue until Canada Post sweetens its contract proposals for rural and urban carriers.

The union and postal service have been unable to reach new collective agreements for the two bargaining units in 10 months of negotiatio­ns. On Monday, walkouts shut down postal operations in Victoria, Edmonton, Windsor, and Halifax, causing few delivery disruption­s outside of those cities.

The agency said Tuesday it has made overtures to the union with the aim of mitigating some of those concerns.

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