Pickering, Oshawa and Peterborough hit by rotating Canada Post strike - Action News
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Toronto

Pickering, Oshawa and Peterborough hit by rotating Canada Post strike

A rotating strike action by Canada Post workers continues to affect mail delivery in parts of the GTA on Monday.

Customers can expect mail delivery, other services to be delayed Monday because of strike

Canada Post
A rotating postal worker strike that has caused disruptions across the country will affect Peterborough, Pickering and Oshawa on Monday. (Jacy Schindel/CBC)

Peterborough, Pickering and Oshawa are the latest three cities in the Greater Toronto Area to be hit by a rotating strike action by Canada Post workers.

Members the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) walked off the job at 4 a.m. Monday in Pickering, while workers in Oshawa headed to the picket line at 6 a.m. They were joined by workersinPeterborough at 8 a.m.

Scarborough Local 602 President Mike Duquette says picket lines will be set up at a Canada Post retail outletand depotin Pickering.

Strike action in other Canadian locations has typically lasted 24 to 36 hours. Duquetteexpects the Pickering and Clarington local job action to last 24 hours.

"This is a limited strategic strike targeting this location as Canada Post Corporation is starting a process of restructuring the station," he said in a statement.

Canada Post customers can expect mail delivery and other services to be delayed because of the strike. The postal service, however, will remain open.

"Mail and parcels will not be delivered or picked up in the impacted areas while the union continues their strike activity," Canada Post said in a memo posted on its website Monday.

Job security among points of contention

Contract negotiations between Canada Post and the union began in November 2017 with mediated talks starting earlier this year.

Unionized workers voted overwhelmingly in favour of a strike in late summer after talks stalled. The job action began after negotiations failed to producea new contract agreement before the union's Oct. 22 strike deadline.

Rotating strikes were chosen to minimize the impact to customers, the union has said.

Striking postal workers were on the picket line in Toronto at the Gateway sorting station in Mississauga and the Eastern Avenue sorting station in Leslieville last Tuesday. (Tony Smyth/CBC)

Last week, nearly 9,000 CUPWmembers walked off the job and headed to the picket linesin Toronto. They were back at work two days later, but the temporary work stoppage delayed the shipment of tens of thousands of letters and parcels across the country, said Mike Palecek, the union's national president.

Key demands for the 50,000CUPWmembers revolve around improved job security, endingforced overtime, better health and safety measures, and equality for rural and suburban mail carriers.

"Postal workers are fighting for good jobs, which balance work and home life, equality for all our workers and safe working condition," Paleceksaid in a news release Monday.

Canada Post is the biggest parcel shipping company in the country, deliveringabout one million parcels a day during the holiday season in 2017, an increase of 20 per cent over the same period in 2016.