Canada moves to end rail shutdown quickly; CN workers to return to work
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[August 23, 2024] By
David Ljunggren and Promit Mukherjee
OTTAWA (Reuters) -Workers at Canadian National Railway will begin
returning to work on Friday, the Teamsters union said, hours after the
Canadian government moved to end an unprecedented rail stoppage.
The union said the work stoppage at Canadian Pacific Kansas City would
continue pending an order from the Canadian Industrial Relations Board (CIRB).
The union and company officials are scheduled to meet with the board on
Friday morning.
Canada's top two railroads, Canadian National Railway and Canadian
Pacific Kansas City had locked out more than 9,000 unionized workers
earlier on Thursday, triggering a simultaneous rail stoppage that
business groups said could inflict hundreds of millions of dollars in
economic damage.
The Canadian government on Thursday announced that it would ask the
country's industrial relations board to issue a back-to-work order that
should come soon.
The CIRB, which is independent, will now consult the companies and
unions before issuing an order.
CN had said it would end its lockout on Thursday at 6 p.m. ET (2200
GMT). CPKC said it was preparing to restart operations in Canada and
further details on timing would be provided once it received the CIRB's
order.
"I assume that the trains will be running within days," Labour Minister
Steven MacKinnon told reporters.
As well as requesting a back-to-work order, MacKinnon asked the board to
start a process of binding arbitration between the Teamsters union and
the companies, and extend the terms of the current labor agreements
until new agreements have been signed.
The sides blamed each other for the stoppage after multiple rounds of
talks failed to yield a deal.
In a new statement during the early hours on Friday, the Teamsters union
posted on X that it had taken down picket lines at CN.
CN spokesperson Jonathan Abecassis told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp
it could take the company a week or more to catch up on shipments.
MacKinnon's decision marked a change of mind by the Liberal government
of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, which had said it wanted to see the
matter settled at the bargaining table.
"We gave negotiations every possible opportunity to succeed ... but we
have an impasse here," MacKinnon said.
"And that is why we have come to this decision today."
RELIANT ON RAIL
Business groups and companies had demanded the government act.
Trudeau, in a post on X, said "collective bargaining is always the best
way forward," but added governments must act when faced with serious
consequences to supply chains and the workers who depend on them.
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Teamsters union workers picket outside a Canadian National Railway
Co. Yard after being locked out by their company in Surrey, British
Columbia, Canada August 22, 2024. REUTERS/Jesse Winter
Canada is the world's second-largest country by area and relies
heavily on railways to transport a wide range of commodities and
industrial goods. Its economy is heavily integrated with that of the
United States, meaning a stoppage would roil North American supply
chains.
"We are pleased the government has responded to our calls to
intervene ... A prolonged stoppage would have imposed enormous costs
on Canadian business," the Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters, an
industry group, said in a statement.
The rail companies previously said they were forced into the
lockouts to avoid strikes at short notice. They said they had
bargained in good faith and made multiple offers with better pay and
working conditions.
Paul Boucher, head of the Teamsters rail union, had accused CN and
CPKC of being "willing to compromise rail safety and tear families
apart to earn an extra buck".
Unions typically do not want contracts decided through arbitration
as it removes their leverage from withholding labor to secure better
terms.
The left-leaning New Democratic Party, which has traditionally
received strong union support and props up Trudeau's government,
opposed the government's decision.
"Justin Trudeau has just sent a message to CN, CPKC and all big
corporations - being a bad boss pays off," party leader Jagmeet
Singh said in a statement.
The stoppage has crippled shipments of grain, potash and coal while
also slowing the transport of petroleum products, chemicals and
autos.
Tens of thousands of people who depend on certain commuter rail
lines into Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal were also hit by the
lockouts, since all train movement on these CPKC-owned lines had
halted indefinitely.
The stoppage was largely rooted in scheduling, availability of labor
and demands for better work-life balance, according to the union and
companies. It comes after Ottawa introduced new duty and rest-period
rules in 2023.
(Reporting by David Ljunggren and Promit Mukherjee in Ottawa,
Abhinav Parmar, Jahnavi Nidumolu and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru and
Allison Lampert in Montreal; Additional reporting by Nathan Gomes
and Nilutpal Timsina in Bengaluru and Ismail Shakil in Ottawa;
Writing by Abhijith Ganavaparam; Editing by Rod Nickel, Jamie Freed,
Jacqueline Wong and Sriraj Kalluvila)
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