Ottawa prepared to end postal strike: minister
Canada Post expects delivery delays into 2019
OTTAWA — The federal government is prepared to order an end to rotating strikes by Canada Post employees if a collective agreement isn’t soon reached, Labour Minister Patty Hajdu said Tuesday.
“We strongly encourage both sides to reach a deal and are prepared to table legislation if we do not see a resolution over the next few days, a step we do not take lightly,” she said in a statement.
Hajdu said the Liberal government has faith in the collective bargaining process and believes the best deals are reached at the bargaining table. She said it has supported and encouraged such an outcome by providing conciliation officers, appointing mediators and offering voluntary arbitrations.
“Despite all of this, limited progress was made and we have exhausted our options,” she added.
Regardless of whether it gets a last-minute deal with its striking employees, Canada Post warned Canadians Tuesday that they can expect delays of parcel and mail delivery into the new year as a result of rotating walkouts.
Businesses and individual customers can expect the worst delays in southern and southwestern Ontario because of a backlog of hundreds of transport trailers sitting idle at Canada Post’s main Toronto sorting facility, the Crown corporation said.
“The postal service remains operational, but the prolonged and ongoing strike activity has not only caused significant backlogs, it continues to greatly reduce our ability to process and deliver mail and parcels across the country,” a Canada Post spokesperson said in an email.
Canada Post has apologized to its customers for the continued walkouts, and warned that it cannot now predict the exact length of delivery delays.
“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.