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‘Concerning lack of urgency’: feds disturbed by B.C. port dispute progress

Country’s east coast shipping funnel also disrupted by separate job action in Montreal
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Workers pose for a photo while picketing at Neptune Terminal during an International Longshore and Warehouse Union labour dispute in North Vancouver, on Tuesday. Canadian retailers say their frustration is growing with what they describe as a lack of urgency to resolve disruptions at Canada’s two largest ports. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

Federal Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon says there’s a “concerning lack of urgency” to resolve port disputes in British Columbia and Montreal and the parties need to reach agreements quickly.

MacKinnon says in a social media post that both sets of negotiations are “progressing at an insufficient pace.”

British Columbia’s port lockout involving a dispute between employers and foremen is into its fourth day, while Port of Montreal dockworkers have been on strike since Thursday.

MacKinnon says he’s closely monitoring both sets of negotiations.

Canadian retailers say their frustration is growing with the lack of movement in the disruptions at Canada’s two largest ports.

Matt Poirier with the Retail Council of Canada says there “doesn’t seem to be any urgency” in resolving the disputes in B.C. and Quebec and it may result in empty shelves as the holiday season approaches.

Poirier describes the situation as a “triple-threat” of labour disruptions, referencing uncertainty at Canada Post, the ongoing lockout of unionized workers at B.C. ports including Vancouver, as well as the strike that has closed two container terminals indefinitely in Montreal.

Poirier says retailers could face a “staggering” impact on the holiday season “where every delivery counts,” with four days of port disruptions potentially equating to about a month in delays due to ripples in the supply chain.

In B.C., the lockout by the BC Maritime Employers Association at container port facilities across the province is being met with silence from employers and the union representing about 700 foremen.

The employers say no talks have taken place or are scheduled with either mediators or the union — a situation described as unusual by labour expert Mark Thompson, who is a retired University of British Columbia professor.

He says it appears the employers are “playing hardball” by making what they call a final offer to the union, but the federal government has been hesitant to intervene beyond mediation because the right to strike is protected in the Canadian Constitution.

“I think we’re in a kind of dance out there,” Thompson said. “Somebody’s waiting for the other side to say chicken, and it hasn’t happened yet.”

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 has said there are no updates on the situation and pickets remain at terminal sites across B.C.

The dispute over issues such as port automation’s effect on unionized workers has been simmering since last year when the previous agreement between employers and the union expired in March 2023.

It comes on the heels of a separate dispute last year between employers and cargo workers that resulted in a strike that froze B.C. ports for 13 days.

The Port of Vancouver — the largest in Canada — has also experienced a disruption involving railways in August and another with grain terminal workers in September.

Meanwhile, Vancouver Fraser Port Authority president and CEO Peter Xotta was set to speak at a pre-scheduled event on the state of the port at the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.

The Port of Montreal strike involves up to 320 workers and has paralyzed 40 per cent of the port’s total container-handling capacity.

Officials with the union, which is connected to the Canadian Union of Public Employees, have said they are willing to call off the strike if a deal is reached on a portion of the dispute centred around scheduling.





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