Tuesday, March 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s public service workers escalate strike to correctional facilities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2025 10:52 AM
  • B.C.'s public service workers escalate strike to correctional facilities

British Columbia jails have been added to the growing list of sites behind picket lines as public service workers escalate job action. 

The B.C. General Employees' Union says in a release that all its remaining unionized staff at adult correctional facilities across the province are now on strike.

The union says the escalation brings the total number of work sites behind pickets to more than 470, with about 25,000 workers taking strike action across 20 ministries, Crown corporations and agencies.

Union president Paul Finch says the escalation is due to the government's "lack of urgency" in coming to the table with a better contract offer. 

The government has said its last proposal to the union was fair in balancing workers' needs and B.C.'s constrained fiscal position.

The strike is in its sixth week, but job action ramped up quickly in the last week, with a march in Vancouver last Friday and a rally at the legislature on Monday as politicians returned for the fall session. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/ ETHAN CAIRNS

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. court grants production order to man defrauded out of $26 million in bitcoin

B.C. court grants production order to man defrauded out of $26 million in bitcoin
A B.C. Supreme Court judge has granted production orders to name cryptocurrency account holders to a man who claims he lost $26 million in bitcoin in a fraud connected to a person who claimed to live in Vancouver.  The court ruling posted Thursday was issued last month involving Lixiao Wang, who petitioned the court for a production order against cryptocurrency platforms Binance and Coinbase. 

B.C. court grants production order to man defrauded out of $26 million in bitcoin

Vancouver police cancel Amber Alert for 2-year-old boy, saying he's safe

Vancouver police cancel Amber Alert for 2-year-old boy, saying he's safe
Vancouver police say they have located a two-year-old boy who was allegedly abducted by his father on Thursday. Police say the boy is safe after they issued an Amber Alert saying they believed he was in imminent danger. 

Vancouver police cancel Amber Alert for 2-year-old boy, saying he's safe

Health Minister Mark Holland not running in upcoming election

Health Minister Mark Holland not running in upcoming election
Health Minister Mark Holland said Thursday he won't run again in the coming federal election, announcing his change in plans just one day before Mark Carney is officially sworn in as prime minister. Holland, who represents the riding of Ajax just outside Toronto, said in a social media post Thursday that "it's time to go home."

Health Minister Mark Holland not running in upcoming election

B.C. legislation would give cabinet sweeping powers amid U.S. tariff threats

B.C. legislation would give cabinet sweeping powers amid U.S. tariff threats
A bill, tabled in the legislature Thursday, gives cabinet the power to implement charges on vehicles using B.C. infrastructure, such as highways and ferries, while allowing the politicians to make directives about public-sector procurement. 

B.C. legislation would give cabinet sweeping powers amid U.S. tariff threats

Trudeau says he's 'proud of Canadians' in video posted on his last day in office

Trudeau says he's 'proud of Canadians' in video posted on his last day in office
Liberal Leader Mark Carney will be sworn in as Canada's 24th prime minister at a ceremony at Rideau Hall Friday after Trudeau's formal resignation. Carney became Liberal leader on Sunday at the party's leadership convention.

Trudeau says he's 'proud of Canadians' in video posted on his last day in office

'Several critical safety failures' behind B.C. workers death, WorkSafeBC says

'Several critical safety failures' behind B.C. workers death, WorkSafeBC says
WorkSafeBC says a worker killed in Vancouver last year when a mould used for concrete fell 26 storeys should never have been able to stand where she was. The report released by the province's worker safety agency says "several critical safety failures" are to blame for the death of the woman at the Oakridge Park development site in February of 2024. 

'Several critical safety failures' behind B.C. workers death, WorkSafeBC says