Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Swissport Says It's Coping With Workers Strike At Pearson, Union Disagrees

Darpan News Desk, 31 Jul, 2017 11:49 AM
    TORONTO — There were widely differing accounts Sunday on how Canada's busiest airport coped with the strike of 700 ground workers.
     
     
    Swissport, which employs the strikers at Toronto's Pearson airport, said there were no major delays Sunday afternoon.
     
     
    "Our efforts to move passengers and their bags in and out of Pearson Airport safely and without disruption is working well and there have been no delays with our operation so far," said Pierre Payette, vice president of Swissport's operations for Toronto.
     
     
    However, an official with the Teamsters, which represents the striking workers, painted a far different picture.
     
     
     
     
    Harjinder Badial said the union has received reports there were backlogs in moving baggage at Pearson's Terminal Three and some flight delays.
     
     
    Both sides were watching operations on Sunday because all of the 30 airlines that Swissport provides ground services to had flights going in and out of the airport. 
     
     
    The airlines include Air Transat, Air France, and Sunwing. Air Canada and Westjet do not rely on Swissport.
     
     
    The workers went on strike on Thursday due to pay and benefits cuts.
     
     
    The union said there were delays in moving baggage on Friday, but the company called it a hiccup.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.
    VANCOUVER — Residents in several areas of British Columbia are bracing for severe thunderstorms as another round of wicked weather bears down on flood-weary regions.

    Forecast Thunderstorms Add To Flooding Concerns Across Southern B.C.

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia man fighting to have his last name — Grabher — reinstated on a licence plate says police have now forced him to remove an inactive Alberta plate from the front of his car.

    Dispute Over Grabher Licence Plate Heats Up As N.S. Man Told To Remove Plate

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market
    Actor Robert De Niro, celebrity chef Nobu Matsuhisa and a cavalcade of development executives are betting huge on Toronto despite outside concerns about a real estate bubble in the city.

    Robert De Niro Lends Celebrity To Nobu Launch As Worries Persist About Toronto's Housing Market

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'
    The amendment to the Motor Vehicle Act known as "Ellen's Law" means drivers must leave at least one metre of open space between their vehicle and a bicycle when passing a bike travelling in the same direction.

    N.B. Drivers Will Have To Keep Distance From Cyclists Under 'Ellen's Law'

    Police In Ontario Turning To Facebook In An Effort To Get Leads In Cold Cases

    Police are turning to social media in an effort to generate leads in unsolved homicides and missing person's cases in central Ontario.

    Police In Ontario Turning To Facebook In An Effort To Get Leads In Cold Cases

    Nine-Year-Old Girl Hospitalized After Drinking 'Unicorn Milk' Vaping Fluid

    Nine-Year-Old Girl Hospitalized After Drinking 'Unicorn Milk' Vaping Fluid
    New Brunswick mother says her nine-year-old daughter was hospitalized after consuming e-cigarette fluids from a brightly labelled "Unicorn Milk" bottle.

    Nine-Year-Old Girl Hospitalized After Drinking 'Unicorn Milk' Vaping Fluid