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British Columbia

Labour minister threatens possibility of imposed agreement after B.C. port workers reject latest deal

Federal Labour Minister Seamus O'Regansays he may be looking at binding arbitration to end a job dispute at B.C.'s ports after union workers rejected a mediated deal.

Second time the longshore workers' union has rejected a deal in ongoing B.C. port dispute

A white man with greying hair speaks into a mic.
Labour Minister Seamus ORegan, seen here in October 2022, said Saturday that binding arbitration or an imposed agreement could be coming to end job action that shut down B.C.'s ports earlier in July. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Federal Labour Minister Seamus O'Regansays he may be looking at binding arbitration to end a job dispute at B.C.'s ports after union workers rejected a mediated deal.

In a Saturday statement, O'Regansaid that he had directed the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB)to find out if the rejection meant a negotiated agreement was impossible.

"If the Board determines that to be the case, I have directed them to either impose a new collective agreement on the parties or impose final binding arbitration to resolve outstanding terms of the collective agreement," the statement reads.

O'Regan adds that the federal government was "prepared for all options" in the job action, leaving open the possibility of back-to-work legislation.

InternationalLongshore and Warehouse Union Canada (ILWU) workers had rejected the agreement on Friday, extending job action that prevented billions ingoods from moving for almost two weeks earlier this month.

In a letter posted on the union's website, union president Rob Ashton saysworkers are now calling on their employers to "come to the table"and negotiate directly, instead of doing so through the B.C. Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA).

In a statement, the BCMEA says it is disappointed the four-yeartentative agreement was rejected, calling it a"good deal thatrecognized the skills and efforts of B.C.'s waterfront workforcewhile providing certainty and stability for the future of Canada'sWest Coast ports."

A large sign strung up between two trees reads
The 13-day strike had shut down ports across B.C. was initially ended by a tentative deal, but the union attempted to restart the strike shortly after. That was deemed illegal by the Canada Industrial Relations Board. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The four-year agreement between the union and maritime employerswent to a vote of about 7,400 workers on Thursday and Friday, afterunion leaders presented the deal to local chapters on Tuesday. ILWU workers staff more than 30 port terminals and other sites across the province, including Canada's largest port in Vancouver.

The deal worked out with federal mediators had put a temporaryhalt to a 13-day strike that had commenced July 1, but its fatesee-sawed wildly as the union leadership then rejected it and triedto go back to picket lines.

When that was deemed illegal by the CIRB, the union submitted a new 72-hour strike notice, only towithdraw it hours later.

On July 20, the union announced it was recommending the deal andwould put it to a full membership vote.

'Simply didn't meet the union's priorities'

Mark Thompson, a professor emeritus atUBC's Sauder School of Business,says he isperplexed overunion membership rejectingthe latest deal.

"I'm surprised, but I can understand why it didn't pass," said Thompson. "The package simply didn't meet the union's priorities."

Thompson says because the union was so adamant about the issues of job security and outside contracting, those issues may have been unaddressed on the contract before them.

"That's the signal, that something which is important to them is going left unaddressed."

On Friday evening, the BCMEA revealeddetails of the deal.

It says thefour-year package rejected by the ILWU included a compounded wage increase of 19.2 per cent anda signing bonus of $1.48 per hour worked to be paid to each employee.

WATCH | What the 13-day port strike means for Canadians:

What the B.C. port strike means for Canada

1 year ago
Duration 3:45
Workers at ports across B.C. are on strike. We break down why it's happening and what it means for you and for Canada's economy.

"Regrettably, ILWU's rejection once again leaves businesses, Canadians and all those who depend on a stable, well-functioning supply chain hanging in the balance," reads a statement from the employer.

Thompson says the federal government under Justin Trudeau has been supportive of collective bargaining in the past, and has been unwilling to impose a settlement by legislation.

On Sunday, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre sent a letter to Trudeau urging him to fire O'Regan, saying he had failed to do his job to end the strike.

Calls for back-to-work legislation

The deal's current failurewill, however, give impetus to calls for back-to-work legislationthat came earlier fromindustry groups and politicians, including Alberta Premier DanielleSmith.

On Saturday, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business characterized the rejection of the deal as "irresponsible" and said they were extremely disappointed.

"If the union issues another 72-hour strike notice, government will have to immediately introduce back-to-work legislation," read a statement from the business group.

Federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh whose party has a supply-and-confidence deal with the Liberals in Parliament said the better course of action is to get both sides of the dispute back to the negotiating table.

"Port workers in British Columbia are fighting for fairness; they want to know that they'll have stability and a good wage so that they can continue supporting their families for years to come," Singh said in a statement.

"We cannot lose sight of what is at stake for B.C. port workers, but also for all workers. Going to work to earn a living that feeds your family and puts a roof over your head is not too much to ask when CEOs are enjoying record profits."

The earlier job action was serious enough that Prime MinisterJustin Trudeau convened the government's incident response group todiscuss the matter, an occurrence typically reserved for moments ofnational crisis.

With files from Michelle Gomez