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British Columbia Dockworkers Issue New 72-Hour Strike Notice After Order to Resume

People walk as longshoremen with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada (ILWU) went on strike at Roberts Bank Superport in Delta, British Columbia, Canada July 2, 2023. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

British Columbia Dockworkers Issue New 72-Hour Strike Notice After Order to Resume

Reuters
Total Views: 6309
July 19, 2023

Update: British Columbia Dockworkers Revoke Strike Notice

Reuters

By Chris Helgren and Steve Scherer

VANCOUVER, July 19 (Reuters) – Striking Pacific coast dock workers in Canada on Wednesday issued a new 72-hour notice of a walkout just hours after a federal watchdog ruled their current stoppage was illegal.

Amid mounting calls for resolute government action to end the strike, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will convene a meeting of the so-called Incident Response Group later on Wednesday, his itinerary showed. The group, comprising senior officials and ministers, only meets in case of crises. 

The strike has upended operations at Vancouver and Prince Rupert, two of Canada’s three busiest ports, which are key gateways for exporting natural resources and commodities and bringing in raw materials.

The Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) watchdog said the strike must end because the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), had not provided the required 72-hour notice before pulling workers off the job on Tuesday. 

A ILWU official, speaking by phone, later said the union had issued a new 72-hour strike notice on Wednesday and workers would be in a position to walk off the job early on Saturday. The union said it would respect the CIRB ruling.

Some 7,500 dock workers have been picketing the two ports almost non-stop since July 1. A Reuters witness said there was no sign of pickets at Vancouver’s port on Wednesday.

On Tuesday the ILWU leadership rejected a tentative four-year contract deal agreed with employers less than a week ago that ended a 13-day strike.

The employers association accused the union of “holding the Canadian economy hostage.”

The walkout is estimated to have disrupted C$6.5 billion ($4.9 billion) of cargo movement at the ports, based on the industry body Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters’ calculation of about C$500 million in disrupted trade each day.

Speaking before news broke of the new strike notice, federal Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan said the stoppage was illegal.

“My patience has run out,” Transport Minister Omar Alghabra told reporters when asked whether the government would pass back-to-work legislation, a politically tricky move. Ministers, he added, were exploring all their options.

The 72-hour strike notice means Ottawa would have until early Saturday to push through a law forcing workers back to their posts, a step favored by the premiers of Alberta and Saskatchewan, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, and Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters.

But David Eby, the left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) premier of British Columbia, said passing such legislation would take too long and urged the two sides “to sort it out at the table as quickly as possible.”

The leader of the official federal opposition Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, earlier said Trudeau should come up with a plan to end the strike within 24 hours, but did not say whether he would support back-to-work legislation.

The federal NDP – a left-leaning opposition party that traditionally enjoys union backing – has been helping Trudeau’s minority government pass legislation. Its leader, Jagmeet Singh, ruled out support for a law to end the strike.

That means Trudeau would need the votes of the Conservatives, who have been trying to court workers and unions, or the separatist Bloc Quebecois. 

It also means the Liberal-NDP deal that is keeping the government going could be put under strain if Trudeau ends up forcing workers back to the job. 

($1 = 1.3181 Canadian dollars)

(Reporting by Chris Helgren in Vancouver and Steve Scherer in Ottawa, additional reporting by Ismail Shakil and David Ljunggren; Editing by Chris Reese, Jonathan Oatis and Daniel Wallis)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2023.

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