Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2020 08:37 PM

    VANCOUVER - Efforts to end a bitter, seven-month strike by forestry workers on Vancouver Island hit another impasse as two mediators have pulled out.

     

    Western Forest Products and United Steelworkers Local 1-1973 confirm in separate statements that mediators Vince Ready and Amanda Rogers say they have withdrawn because the two sides are too far apart.

     

    As many as 3,000 Western Forest Products workers and contractors have been off the job since last July.

     

    A release posted by the company says it is "disappointed" the union continues to refuse wage and contract proposals that are superior to those accepted by forestry workers at other B.C. operations.

     

    The union blames the departure of the mediators on the company's refusal to move off its concessions and change any of its positions.

     

    The mayors of Port McNeill and Campbell River, two Vancouver Island communities hit hard by the ongoing strike, have called on both sides to resolve their differences, while the provincial government has refused to intervene in the dispute.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Miscommunication Led To Three People Turned Away At Pipeline Checkpoint: RCMP

    Miscommunication Led To Three People Turned Away At Pipeline Checkpoint: RCMP
    VANCOUVER - The RCMP says miscommunication led to three people being turned away at a checkpoint along a logging road leading to a work site for a natural gas pipeline in northern British Columbia.

    Miscommunication Led To Three People Turned Away At Pipeline Checkpoint: RCMP

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion
    OTTAWA - The B.C. government will ask Canada's high court Thursday to give it authority over what can flow through the expanded Trans Mountain pipeline from Alberta.

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes
    HALIFAX - As Canadian firefighters boarded flights Wednesday to battle blazes in Australia, they noted they will likely have to employ some different tactics than they do to fight local fires.    

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells
    A group tasked with cleaning up thousands of abandoned energy sites in Alberta says the province's rules for ensuring polluters reclaim their wells before selling them off are inadequate.

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief
    A pipeline at the centre of a conflict between hereditary chiefs and a natural gas company in northern British Columbia is creating jobs for Indigenous people and lifting communities from poverty, says an elected chief of a band that supports the project.    

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments
    The judgment in Ontario Superior Court of Justice comes despite the difficulties in suing people who post inflammatory comments anonymously, and who then fail to respond to the resulting legal proceedings against them.

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments