Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

No Substantive Progress' In Talks As CN Rail Workers Strike Enters Fourth Day

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2019 09:48 PM
  • No Substantive Progress' In Talks As CN Rail Workers Strike Enters Fourth Day

MONTREAL - The strike at the country's biggest railway has entered its fourth day with no resolution in sight as round-the-clock negotiations continue under the watch of federal mediators.

The Teamsters union said Friday that "no substantive progress has been made" since 3,200 workers hit the picket lines early Tuesday morning.

The union claims Quebec's propane shortage "appears to be largely manufactured" by Canadian National Railway Co. amid rising pressure from industry and Prairie premiers to reconvene Parliament ahead of schedule and pass back-to-work legislation.

Premier Francois Legault said Thursday that the province is days away from running out of propane, which heats hospitals and nursing homes and fuels operations in agriculture and mining.

Tensions rose between CN Rail and the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference as progress stalled in Montreal late in the week.

The union framed CN's decision to transport freight other than propane as "a business decision." The Montreal-based railroad operator continues to run some trains using locomotive engineers and supervisors, who remain on the job.

CN Rail rejected the union's claim that the strike concerns workplace health and safety, suggesting instead that it revolves around worker compensation.

"While the current average salary of a Canadian conductor is $114,000 plus benefits, including a defined benefits pension plan, the union is seeking wage and benefit improvements beyond those negotiated this year with Unifor and another bargaining unit of the TCRC," CN said in a release.

CN said it has offered to enter into binding arbitration, with a neutral arbitrator chosen by the parties or appointed by the federal government.

A prolonged disruption to CN Rail — a critical artery for imported consumer goods and a key export channel for commodities ranging from grain to fertilizer and forestry products — could dent the country's economy.

The strike could cost the Canadian economyup to $2.2 billion if it lasts through the end of the month, and up to $3.1 billion if it continues until Dec. 5, according to TD senior economist Brian DePratto.

A nine-day strike at Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. in 2012 drove a nearly seven-per-cent drop in the goods sector that month, DePratto said. Federal back-to-work legislation ended the labour disruption.

"Should this strike drag on, it would clearly be disruptive to the Canadian economy and to the company in question," said Avery Shenfeld, chief economist at CIBC Capital Markets.

"An extended strike risks seeing a near flattening in economic activity to finish the year," he said in an email, noting fourth-quarter GDP growth had been expected to hit one per cent.

Nearly two-thirds of propane travels along the tracks at some point — in Quebec, about 85 per cent arrives by rail — with the rest shipped by truck, according to the Canadian Propane Association.

As of Sept. 30, CN had shipped in 2019 some $11.33 billion in total freight along its 22,000 kilometres of track, which stretches from Vancouver to Halifax to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

MORE National ARTICLES

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

A Toronto gallery must now pay tens of thousands of dollars to a Canadian musician who alleged he was sold a fake painting purported to be by the renowned Indigenous artist Norval Morrisseau.

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole
A British Columbia mother found guilty of the second-degree murder of her eight-year-old daughter has been sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole for 15 years.

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message
On September 3, 2019, students across the Surrey School District will be starting a new year of study and the aim of the Surrey RCMP Traffic Enforcement Unit is to ensure those students are safe while they travel to and from school.

Driving Home The ‘Back To School’ Message

Abbotsford Police Seek Driver And Pedestrian Witnesses Of Fatal Collision

Specifically, police are seeking to speak to the driver of the van pictured below.    

Abbotsford Police Seek Driver And Pedestrian Witnesses Of Fatal Collision

Single Vehicle Roll-over Incident Snares Traffic In New West Intersection

Single Vehicle Roll-over Incident Snares Traffic In New West Intersection
A single-vehicle roll-over incident is causing traffic congestion at the intersection of East 8th Avenue and East Columbia Street in the New Westminster neighbourhood of Sapperton.

Single Vehicle Roll-over Incident Snares Traffic In New West Intersection

Wanted: Man Believed To Be Tied To Lower Mainland Gang Conflict

Vancouver Police are appealing for help to find 45-year-old Romano Martodihardjo, currently wanted Canada-wide for firearms offences and possession of stolen property.

Wanted: Man Believed To Be Tied To Lower Mainland Gang Conflict