2nd tentative deal reached in B.C. port strike: union - Action News
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British Columbia

2nd tentative deal reached in B.C. port strike: union

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada says it has reached atentative deal with the B.C. Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) for thesecond time in a week.

Union caucus will vote Friday on whether to send tentative deal to membership for ratification

A small boat passes behind a bulk carrier ship at anchor on the harbour during a work stoppage at the port, in Vancouver.
A small boat passes behind a bulk carrier ship at anchor on the harbour during a work stoppage at the port in Vancouver on July 19, 2023. British Columbia port employees union reached a tentative agreement with the BCMEA for the second time on July 20. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) Canada says it has reached atentative deal with the B.C. Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) for thesecond time in a week.

The local union's caucus announced Thursday evening a tentative agreement had been reached on Wednesday, and the contract caucus will vote in an emergency meeting Friday on whether the agreement should be sent to its membership for ratification.

They say if the contract caucus votes in favour tomorrow, the union will call a meeting to present the deal to membership.

There was no mention of a new tentative agreement onthe BCMEA's website.

More than 7,400 workers from the ILWUhad walked off the jobfrom July 1 until July 13, paralyzing B.C. ports and costing industries billions of dollars.

A bald white man with a grey goatee, tattooed arms, a navy blue tank top and camouflage shorts hold a white picket sign reading 'ILWU ON STRIKE.
An ILWU Canada worker pickets outside of the B.C. Maritime Employers Association dispatch centre in Vancouver on July 3, shortly after the initial strike was launched. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Employees are striking over issues likeport automation, outside contracting and the increasing cost of living.

Thursday'sdevelopment is the latest in a turbulent week that saw the union voting down a federal mediator's terms, the union issuing but quickly rescinding a new 72-hour strike notice, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau convening the federal incident response group.

Prime Minister Trudeau said earlier Thursday the federal government is "dismayed" the firsttentative agreement was rejected by the longshore union leadership, calling the decision "unacceptable."

New deal likely similar to previous one, experts say

Richard Johnson, co-founder and partner at Ascent Employment Law, says he expects the deal to be passed by the contractcaucus as well as the union's membership.

"Once the federal government came in and started to put pressure on the port workers ... that started to pave the way I think for this to end and for the workers to get back to work," he said.

Johnson says the new deal is likely not very different from the earlier proposed one.

Professor Emeritus at University of British Columbia'sSauder School of BusinessMark Thompson alsoexpects the new tentative deal is very similar, if not identical, to the deal that was rejected by the union last week.

"I don't think it's going to be much different," he said. "The context has changed, but maybe the package hasn't changed."

Thompsonsays if the caucus does pass the agreement, the union's members are very likely to ratify it.

With files from The Canadian Press