Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bring back hazard pay for supermarket workers: MP

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2022 02:34 PM
  • Bring back hazard pay for supermarket workers: MP

OTTAWA - Grocery stores are being urged to reinstate hazard pay for workers facing extra health and safety risks from the highly contagious Omicron variant.

The federal NDP's critic for economic development has written to the heads of Canada's biggest supermarkets asking them to restore "pandemic pay," which was brought in after COVID-19 first struck and then cancelled.

Brian Masse, MP for Windsor West, says grocery store workers, including those at the checkout, are doing risky work during the Omicron surge and again deserve "hazard pay" for helping to keep stores open and shelves stocked.

The MP says he wants to hold Sobeys CEO Michael Medline to his promise before a Commons committee in July 2020 that he would reintroduce a wage premium if provinces reinstate restrictions.

Several grocery store chains including Sobeys did provide workers with a temporary wage bump during the third wave of COVID-19 last spring.

Provinces have reintroduced restrictions to tackle the Omicron variant, with Ontario returning schools to online learning and Quebec beginning Sunday closures of non-essential stores. British Columbia and Manitoba have also tightened controls.

Jacquelin Weatherbee, vice-president of communications at Sobeys, said the supermarket chain will reinstate its lockdown bonus if there are "government-mandated lockdowns that close all non-essential retail."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Top court to weigh timing of roadside breath tests

Top court to weigh timing of roadside breath tests
The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to hear a case that hinges on the time police took to arrange a breath test for a Quebec man. Asked if he had been drinking, Breault said he'd had one beer, but insisted he had not been driving the vehicle, contradicting trail patrollers who had contacted the police.    

Top court to weigh timing of roadside breath tests

Alberta coal panel accused of bias, U.S. influence

Alberta coal panel accused of bias, U.S. influence
Members of Citizens Supportive of Crowsnest Coal have been writing letters to Premier Jason Kenney and Energy Minister Sonya Savage that suggest the panel's report is likely to be skewed and one-sided.

Alberta coal panel accused of bias, U.S. influence

StatCan: Online census response rate hits new high

StatCan: Online census response rate hits new high
Statistics Canada says about 84 per cent of completed census questionnaires were filled out online. The agency beat its goal to of having 80 per cent of census questionnaires completed online — an option made available for the first time to all regions of the country.

StatCan: Online census response rate hits new high

Biden noncommittal on EV carveout for Canada

Biden noncommittal on EV carveout for Canada
Canada and Mexico both are worried that the tax credit proposal, which if implemented as it stands would be worth up to $12,500 to a new car buyer, is too heavily geared toward U.S.-made vehicles.

Biden noncommittal on EV carveout for Canada

Mayor says farmers in Abbotsford need water

Mayor says farmers in Abbotsford need water
The mayor of a city heavily impacted by flooding in southern British Columbia says farmers who stayed with their animals desperately need water for livestock. Henry Braun said Thursday that water levels in Abbotsford continue to fluctuate in the Sumas Prairie area two days after an evacuation order was issued.

Mayor says farmers in Abbotsford need water

Train leaves Hope, B.C., with about 200 people

Train leaves Hope, B.C., with about 200 people
A late-night evacuation passenger train carrying about 200 people stranded for days by British Columbia's mudslides and floods left Hope for Vancouver Wednesday. Jonathan Abecassis, a spokesman for Canadian National, said the emergency evacuation train was expected to arrive in Vancouver shortly after 10 p.m.

Train leaves Hope, B.C., with about 200 people