Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Public service workers in B.C. to begin job action

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2022 08:09 AM
  • Public service workers in B.C. to begin job action

BURNABY, B.C. - The British Columbia General Employees' Union says it will set up picket lines at four BC Liquor Distribution Branch wholesale and distribution centres as it begins targeted job action.

The union, which represents about 33,000 public-service workers across B.C., issued strike notice Friday and is to be in a legal strike position by this afternoon.

It says picket lines will go up at 3:30 p.m., outside liquor distribution centres in Delta, Richmond and Kamloops, as well as the wholesale customer centre in Victoria.

A statement from the union says retail liquor and cannabis stores are not part of this job action, but the cannabis division of the Burnaby customer care centre is included, although a picket line won't be set up there.

Union president Stephanie Smith has said wage protection is the top concern of her members as inflation climbs dramatically.

The contract between the BCGEU and the Public Service Agency expired April 1 and there have been sporadic talks since April 6, but the union rejected an invitation from the agency for another meeting last week, saying it would "not be fruitful."

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey high school graduate wins the Schulich scholarship valued at $100,000

Surrey high school graduate wins the Schulich scholarship valued at $100,000
Tejash Poddar, Enver Creek Secondary graduate from Surrey is this year's recipient of the Schulich Leaders Scholarship. He has received a $100,000 engineering scholarship and stood out from 1500 nominees and emerged as two of only 100 winners from across Canada.

Surrey high school graduate wins the Schulich scholarship valued at $100,000

Vancouver Police Renew Appeal For Info In Case of Missing Man

Vancouver Police Renew Appeal For Info In Case of Missing Man
Vancouver Police are reissuing a plea to the public for information on the whereabouts of David Sullivan who went missing one year ago.

Vancouver Police Renew Appeal For Info In Case of Missing Man

Veterans Affairs hiring more staff for backlog

Veterans Affairs hiring more staff for backlog
The federal government will hire hundreds more temporary staff as part of a broader plan to tackle the growing backlog of requests for support and benefits from disabled veterans, many of whom are being forced to wait years for an answer.

Veterans Affairs hiring more staff for backlog

Police investigate death after responding to dog attack in Kamloops, B.C.

Police investigate death after responding to dog attack in Kamloops, B.C.
Police are investigating the sudden death of a man after responding to a report of a dog attack Monday morning in Kamloops, B.C.

Police investigate death after responding to dog attack in Kamloops, B.C.

Feds reviewing aid response, PM says

Feds reviewing aid response, PM says
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says an ongoing review of the federal response to COVID-19 will feed into plans for responding to a potential second wave of the novel coronavirus.

Feds reviewing aid response, PM says

Fake news fight a global endeavour: LeBlanc

Fake news fight a global endeavour: LeBlanc
The federal Liberal government learned a lot from last year's defensive measures against so-called "fake news" in advance of the October 2019 election, said LeBlanc, president of the Privy Council and the minister charged with keeping tabs on Canada's democratic health.

Fake news fight a global endeavour: LeBlanc