Friday, June 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Post workers vote overwhelmingly to accept new contract

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2026 12:53 PM
  • Canada Post workers vote overwhelmingly to accept new contract

Postal workers have given the thumbs-up to a new contract, casting their ballots overwhelmingly to approve a tentative agreement after more than two years of labour strife.

The union representing some 55,000 Canada Post employees said Monday that more than four in five voted in favour of the five-year deal, which includes wage increases of 6.5 per cent and three per cent in the first two years. It also locks in hikes that match the annual inflation rate in years three through five, on top of enhanced benefits and a weekend parcel delivery model.

About 86 per cent of rural and suburban mail carriers voted to accept the contract, and 89 per cent of urban workers gave it the green light, according to the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.

The parties will "soon sign" the agreements, which expire on Jan. 31, 2029, Canada Post said.

The deal marks the denouement of a drawn-out saga of collective bargaining and rotating strikes amid a push to overhaul the Crown corporation's business model in the face of declining letter mail and mounting financial losses, which topped $5 billion between 2018 and 2025.

Canada Post and the union have long sparred over wages and structural changes to the postal service, with workers taking to the picket line repeatedly throughout the negotiations. Both sides agreed not to launch any strikes or lockouts while the six-week ratification vote took place.

About 60 per cent of the union board endorsed the proposed collective agreement, saying it ensures job security, but the union's president had asked members to reject it, arguing it rolls back rights and compensation.

"We still have our work cut out for us. To win the fights ahead, prepare for the next round of bargaining and mobilize against the government’s attacks on our public postal service, we all have to regroup and unite in our struggle," said president Jan Simpson in a bulletin to members Monday.

In a statement, Canada Post CEO Doug Ettinger said he was pleased with the outcome and that the new deal offers stability and a path to "restore confidence in the postal system."

"While the process was challenging, these negotiated agreements recognize that Canada Post needs to change."

Amid declining letter demand and steep competition for parcels, the Crown corporation has said it must modernize through reforms that include community mailboxes, weekend parcel delivery and possible post office closures.

The road to ratification has been a long one.

In December 2024, the federal government asked the Canada Industrial Relations Board to step in to quash a month-long strike, and struck an Industrial Inquiry Commission to determine a path forward.

That probe, led by William Kaplan, made a series of recommendations that were later adopted and rolled out in a suite of sweeping changes to Canada Post's mandate.

Announced in September, the overhaul lifted a moratorium on community mailbox conversions, authorizing the mail carrier to convert the remaining four million addresses that still receive door-to-door delivery. The government also announced an end to the freeze on rural post office closures — some locations are now surrounded by suburban subdivisions — that has been in place since 1994, covering close to 4,000 outlets.

On Monday, Procurement Minister Joel Lightbound said the agreement marked a milestone for the Crown corporation.

"This is an important moment for workers, for Canada Post, and for the millions of Canadians and businesses who rely on a stable and reliable postal service every day," he said in an emailed statement.

On Friday, the postal service reported that it lost $205 million before taxes in the first quarter of the year as it moves forward with the overhaul.

Last month, the federal government handed $673 million to Canada Post to keep the money-bleeding mail service afloat for the current fiscal year.

That amount was carried over from the roughly $1 billion Ottawa authorized in a massive funding top-up earlier this year. It also followed last year's initial $1.03-billion cash injection, which failed to sustain the postal service past early February 2026.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Prime Minister Mark Carney has not delivered on his economic promises after more than a year in office.

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs
Canada's privacy commissioner says he hopes laws around private sector data sharing are strengthened as the federal government prepares to open the domestic market to Chinese electric vehicles.

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election
Alberta's governing United Conservatives are looking to take another run at redrawing provincial riding boundaries – a move the Opposition NDP calls a cynical backdoor scheme to rig the October 2027 general election.

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election

In a B.C. industrial zone, a new link forged in Canada's crucial lithium supply chain

In a B.C. industrial zone, a new link forged in Canada's crucial lithium supply chain
Nestled in a series of unassuming industrial buildings in Delta, B.C., among companies specializing in plumbing supplies, ladders and fitness equipment, sits North America's first electrochemical lithium refining facility.

In a B.C. industrial zone, a new link forged in Canada's crucial lithium supply chain

B.C. tables another First Nation treaty ratification, but overlap concerns persist

B.C. tables another First Nation treaty ratification, but overlap concerns persist
The Kitselas First Nation in northwestern B.C. has reached a major milestone in its treaty process as the province tabled legislation to ratify the agreement, in the second such achievement for a First Nation in as many days.

B.C. tables another First Nation treaty ratification, but overlap concerns persist

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen and NASA crewmates to hold news conference

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen and NASA crewmates to hold news conference
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen and his NASA crewmates are set to take part in a news conference on Thursday after the historic Artemis II lunar mission.

Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen and NASA crewmates to hold news conference