Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Post puts forward ‘final offers’ to union, posts $1.3B loss for 2024

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2025 11:49 AM
  • Canada Post puts forward ‘final offers’ to union, posts $1.3B loss for 2024

Canada Post said it notched nearly $1.3 billion in operating losses last year as the beleaguered institution laid out its "final offersto the union representing 55,000 workers after negotiations resumed on Wednesday. 

The Crown corporation has now posted seven consecutive annual losses, amounting to $3.8 billion before tax since 2018, it said.

Included in its latest proposal are an end to compulsory overtime, signing bonuses of between $500 and $1,000 and cost-of-living payments that are triggered at a lower inflation threshold.

Management's earlier offer of a nearly 14 per cent cumulative wage hike over four years remains unchanged, as does a plan to hire part-time staff for weekend delivery — a major sticking point in the talks.

Canada Post also aims to launch "dynamic routing" at 10 processing facilities initially, which could see mail carriers' routes change daily in response to parcel volume.

In a news release, it quoted a federally commissioned report released earlier this month that recommended dynamic routes and part-time weekend positions with similar pay rates, benefits and pension plans to full-time positions.

"Canada Post is facing an existential crisis: It is effectively insolvent, or bankrupt," commissioner William Kaplan wrote in the May 15 report.

"The world has changed, and both Canada Post and CUPW (Canadian Union of Postal Workers) must evolve and adapt. Merely tinkering with the status quo is not an option."

A month-long strike last fall stemming from the same contract negotiations cost the organization $208 million, said the annual report released late Wednesday. 

Revenue from parcels fell by $683 million or 20 per cent, it said.

The union had been in a strike position starting Friday last week but opted instead for an overtime ban.

Canada Post said ongoing uncertainty has pushed down parcel volumes by 65 per cent from the same time last year.

The organization faces big questions about its business model and its future as letter volumes plunge, prompting a $1-billion federal loan in January to keep it afloat.

Lorraine Muller, who worked at Canada Post as a letter carrier until last fall when she turned to sorting mail at a facility in Montreal, says workers have been getting a "bad deal" and that structural reform is needed. But a solution to postal woes is hard to come by.

"That's the toughest question," she said in an interview on Wednesday. "What do you do? I don't know."

Muller pointed to previous suggestions of expanding into banking — like the postal service in France and the Czech Republic — given the flight of bank branches from small towns.

"Many of us have a deep, deep sense of public service and public good, so let us do our jobs. We're not robots yet," she said.

“But stop driving away customers.”

Shippers fled Canada Post in droves when workers walked off the job on Nov. 15. Many customers returned after a ministerial directive prompted employees to go back to work on Dec. 17. Rather than be caught flat-footed a second time, plenty of e-commerce companies have played it safe this month by booking with other couriers.

Customer service agents struggling to handle the surge in business last autumn "were just overwhelmed," said Timothy Byrnes, who owns parcel delivery firm Jet Worldwide. His company was better prepared for the flood of shipments this time around, he said.

Meanwhile, employees may sense a threat of layoffs with Canada Post's proposal for part-time jobs in particular.

"Moving more parcel delivery to the weekends and having that be done by part-time workers poses a potential threat to the volume of work that is allocated to full-time workers during the week," said Stephanie Ross, an associate professor in the School of Labour Studies at McMaster University.

"Is there a path to moving into full-time or to converting those positions into full-time work?"

Ross also highlighted potential points of tension among workers.

"There are some people in the union who would see the ability to have permanent part-time work at the same wage rate and with access to pensions and benefits as a big improvement over doing temporary work because there is temp work already going on at the post office," she said.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

Is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Risk? Navigating the Future of DEI in Canada 

Is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Risk? Navigating the Future of DEI in Canada 
As corporate cutbacks and shifting public sentiment create uncertainty, many are asking: Is the momentum behind workplace diversity fading? Experts in workplace diversity and Canadian policy argue that, rather than disappearing, DEI is evolving, and its long-term sustainability will depend on how organizations choose to embed it into their core values. 

Is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Risk? Navigating the Future of DEI in Canada 

How to Avoid Overscheduling Your Child and Why This Is Important 

How to Avoid Overscheduling Your Child and Why This Is Important 
When we look at how to avoid overscheduling our kids, we should take the time to self-reflect. Our kids are not extensions of our hopes and dreams; they are their own people, and by separating their identity from our own, we can give them a chance to be who they want to be as opposed to who we think they should be.  Some helpful reminders on how to step away from overscheduling your child: 

How to Avoid Overscheduling Your Child and Why This Is Important 

Darpan 10: Harjinder Singh Sidhu Chief Constable - Delta Police Department  

Darpan 10: Harjinder Singh Sidhu Chief Constable - Delta Police Department  
Meet the first South Asian Chief Constable of the Delta Police Department, Mr. Harjinder Sidhu. Find out more about his new role and his plan to tackle crime South of the Fraser.

Darpan 10: Harjinder Singh Sidhu Chief Constable - Delta Police Department  

Woman dies after being found unresponsive on Blackcomb Mountain in B.C.

Woman dies after being found unresponsive on Blackcomb Mountain in B.C.
A woman has died after being found unresponsive on a mountain at a British Columbia ski resort. Police say a person riding the gondola at Whistler Blackcomb spotted the woman on Blackcomb Mountain, and patrollers contacted police at about 10 a.m. on Thursday after locating her.

Woman dies after being found unresponsive on Blackcomb Mountain in B.C.

B.C.'s Kwantlen university to lay off 70 faculty due to $49 million revenue loss

B.C.'s Kwantlen university to lay off 70 faculty due to $49 million revenue loss
About 70 faculty members at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Metro Vancouver will receive lay-off notices Friday after a "sharp decline" in international students resulted in a revenue loss of about $49 million. Laurie Clancy, vice-president of human resources at the university, says the decision is "sad and unfortunate" because they have a wonderful faculty.

B.C.'s Kwantlen university to lay off 70 faculty due to $49 million revenue loss

Rare unanimous support for B.C. bill on perinatal, postnatal mental health care

Rare unanimous support for B.C. bill on perinatal, postnatal mental health care
The Opposition B.C. Conservatives say the proposal by caucus chair Jody Toor is the first private member’s bill to pass second reading with unanimous support in a recorded vote in 43 years.

Rare unanimous support for B.C. bill on perinatal, postnatal mental health care