As of 9 a.m. Saturday, more than 7,000 B.C.’s port workers are on strike.
In a statement issued at 8 a.m. Wednesday, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada (ILWU) said workers were prepared to walk off the job as talks broke down between the two sides.
Bargaining between the ILWU and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) has been ongoing since February. Their collective agreement expired on March 31.
Saturday morning, BCMEA issued a statement regarding the job action.
“Over the course of the past couple of days, the BCMEA has continued to advance proposals and positions in good faith, with the objective of achieving a fair deal at the table,” staff said in a release.
“Our bargaining committee has made repeated efforts to be flexible and find compromise on key priorities, but regrettably, the parties have yet to be successful in reaching a settlement.”
On Friday afternoon, Seamus O’Regan, the Minister for Labour, said in a tweet that he met with both parties in Vancouver and encouraged them to keep working towards a deal.
“Everyone understands what’s at stake here,” he said.
Experts say what’s at stake is “major damage” to Canada’s economy.
Ports in Vancouver and Prince Rupert are “pivotal” for Canadian trade, UBC Sauder School of Business professor Werner Antweiler said earlier this week.
Some $800 million worth of goods flow into and out of Canada through B.C.’s ports every day, he added, representing roughly a quarter of the country’s total imports and exports.
“These ports are critical infrastructure. They are a bottleneck for our economy that we all rely on,” he told Global News. “If they go offline for any number of days, it will lead to costs in the hundreds of millions of
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