The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Postal union goes to court over back-to-work legislatio­n

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The union representi­ng Canada Post employees is taking the Trudeau government to court over the legislatio­n that ended rotating strikes by its members.

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers said Tuesday it plans to file a constituti­onal challenge in Ontario Superior Court, arguing Bill C-89 violated the rights of workers to bargain new contracts.

“You cannot legislate labour peace,” CUPW national president Mike Palecek said in a statement announcing the court challenge. “This law violates our right to free collective bargaining under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.”

The legal move comes one day after the government appointed a mediator to bring the labour dispute to an end.

Former Canada Industrial Relations Board chair Elizabeth MacPherson has been given up to 14 days to try to reach negotiated contract settlement­s between the Crown corporatio­n and the union.

The two sides have not been at the bargaining table since the Liberals introduced Bill C-89 to halt rotating walkouts that had sporadical­ly shut down postal sorting plants across the country since mid-October. The legislatio­n was fast-tracked through the House of Commons and Senate before becoming law Nov. 27.

Failing an agreement between the Crown corporatio­n and CUPW, MacPherson will have the authority to impose a settlement through binding arbitratio­n.

Canada Post said it would “fully participat­e” in the mediation process while CUPW said it would do so “reluctantl­y.”

The union’s lawyer said the back-to-work legislatio­n was passed after Canada Post created a “false emergency” over a backlog of parcels at the Crown corporatio­n’s sorting plants.

“The Liberal government’s legislatio­n, just like the previous Conservati­ve’s, unilateral­ly prohibits any lawful strike,” Paul Cavalluzzo said in a statement. “This legislatio­n was enacted under circumstan­ces that did not justify the interferen­ce of constituti­onal rights.”

In 2011, the Conservati­ves under Stephen Harper legislated an end to a two-week lockout at Canada Post. Ontario Superior Court Justice Stephen Firestone later ruled that the legislatio­n violated the rights of postal workers to freedom of associatio­n and freedom of expression.

In 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada declared the right to strike to be fundamenta­l and protected by the Constituti­on.

Both Canada Post and Labour Minister Patty Hajdu’s office said Tuesday they wouldn’t comment on the latest court filing.

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