Bombardier strike could delay Toronto streetcar delivery - Action News
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Thunder Bay

Bombardier strike could delay Toronto streetcar delivery

The strike at Bombardier's light-rail plant in Thunder Bay, Ont., will impact public transit plans in Toronto, an economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is warning.

Strike at plant in Thunder Bay, Ont., could affect $1.2B contract, August rollout of new streetcars

Close to 1,000 Thunder Bay Bombardier workers walked off the job on Monday afternoon. The union, Unifor, says the company has rejected its latest offer. (Jeff Walters/CBC)

The strike at Bombardier's light-rail plant in Thunder Bay, Ont., will impact public transit plans in Toronto,a senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is warning.

The labour dispute between the company and almost 1,000 of its unionized workersis now into its third day.

The Toronto Transit Commission (TTC)plansto launch the next generation of streetcars in August, but theBombardier strike could delay that launch.

Armine Yalnizyan, a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, shared her thoughts on the strike. (Supplied)

"The most important thing about this strike is that it's going to alter the timing of the delivery of probably the biggest contract in light-rail transit that this country, maybe the world, has ever seen,"ArmineYalnizyansaid.

ButYalnizyan said she didn't expect the delay would affect the cost of producing and delivering streetcars.

"The issue most people worry about when they hear strike is costs are going to go up,"she said. "[But they shouldnt worry] because these are signed, sealed and delivered contracts."

Before the strike, the Thunder Bay assembly line workers were in the midst of completing the $1.2-billioncontract for 204 streetcars for Toronto.They were also working on 70 subway cars, worth another $1 billion, as well as GO trains.

Skilled labour in short supply

Yalnizyan noted the labour dispute is really about establishing bargaining power a struggle that doesnt always favour the employer.

If the strike goes on for a long time in Thunder Bay, she said,it could mean a loss of skilled labour to Alberta, where it isin short supply.

Yalnizyan noted the tighter labour markets might start shifting bargaining power back towardworkers. How fast this dispute is settled, she said, will be a marker of how things are changing.

Yalnizyan speculated workers may be on the winning side of the dispute.

"That assembly line isn't going anywhere," she said. "[Bombardier] is in the middle of a back order [they are] not going to pick up and relocate."

TTC commits to schedule

The TTC said it is still expecting to have "at least one new streetcar in service" starting on its Aug. 31 deadline.

"That commitment remains unchanged," said TTC spokesman Brad Ross.

The few test Bombardier streetcars currently on Toronto streets have advertising on them mentioning the Aug. 31 rollout.

Whether Bombardier can meet its broader vehicle delivery commitments to the TTC, Ross said, is a question for Bombardier to answer.

Increasing profit margins

Trimming labour costs doesn't usually translate to lower prices, Yalnizyansaid. It usually means more profits.

An assistant professor of business strategy at McMaster University in Hamilton said companies are doing anything they can to make their profit margins larger.

Marvin Ryder said that sometimes leads to outsourcing or attempts to cut benefits, some of the key issues in the dispute between Bombardier and its Thunder Bay workers.

Ironically, it's pension funds that are primarily responsible for putting pressure on Bombardierto become more profitable, Ryder said.

"It's not rich individuals saying, 'Bombardier, you need to make more profit,'"he said.

"It is actually the pension funds [that] are managing these resources on behalf of retirees who are saying, 'Look, the retirees are giving us some grief, I need you to perform a little better.'"