Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Talks Set For Friday Aimed At Avoiding Possible Looming Corrections Strike

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2016 11:57 AM
    TORONTO — The union for correctional and probation officers has scheduled a last-ditch attempt at reaching a contract with the Ontario government and avoiding a strike.
     
    Smokey Thomas, the president of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, says the two sides will meet Friday.
     
    The workers — who rejected an earlier tentative settlement — will be in a legal strike position as of 12:01 a.m. Sunday.
     
    The government, meanwhile, has been making contingency plans in the event of a strike to have managers from other areas of the public service to help keep the jails and probation offices running.
     
    A spokeswoman says most direct contact with inmates "will be handled and overseen by experienced corrections managers."
     
    Strike preparations have long been in the works, as the correctional and probation workers have been without a contract since December 2014, with the government spending $8.5 million on training and renovating spaces in the jails.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tone And Terms Of Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Will Be Critical: Wally Oppal

    Tone And Terms Of Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Will Be Critical: Wally Oppal
    Oppal also says the Grits should take previous inquiries into account to ensure the new investigation does not retrace old ground. 

    Tone And Terms Of Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry Will Be Critical: Wally Oppal

    Hydro One Rehires Shawn Simoes, Man Fired After Vulgar Heckling Of TV Reporter Shauna Hunt

    Shawn Simoes lost his job as an assistant network management engineer with Hydro One this May in connection with an incident at a Toronto FC game that was captured on camera and widely denounced on social media

    Hydro One Rehires Shawn Simoes, Man Fired After Vulgar Heckling Of TV Reporter Shauna Hunt

    Justin Trudeau To Formally Become 23rd Prime Minister Wednesday, Says Rideau Hall

    Justin Trudeau To Formally Become 23rd Prime Minister Wednesday, Says Rideau Hall
    The ceremony will see Justin Trudeau become Canada's 23rd prime minister, replacing Stephen Harper after the Liberals defeated the Conservatives in the Oct. 19 election.

    Justin Trudeau To Formally Become 23rd Prime Minister Wednesday, Says Rideau Hall

    First Month, Four Summits: Justin Trudeau Heading To Turkey, Philippines, Malta, Paris

    First Month, Four Summits: Justin Trudeau Heading To Turkey, Philippines, Malta, Paris
    WASHINGTON — Justin Trudeau will travel to four international summits within his first month in office.

    First Month, Four Summits: Justin Trudeau Heading To Turkey, Philippines, Malta, Paris

    Catcheway Family Allowed To Continue Search For Daughter On Manitoba Reserve

    Catcheway Family Allowed To Continue Search For Daughter On Manitoba Reserve
    Bernice Catcheway — whose daughter Jennifer disappeared seven years ago — says the family was barred from searching the Dakota Tipi reserve after searchers brought in a backhoe last week.

    Catcheway Family Allowed To Continue Search For Daughter On Manitoba Reserve

    B.C. Ski Operators Optimistic After Unusually Early Snowfalls On Many Mountains

    B.C. Ski Operators Optimistic After Unusually Early Snowfalls On Many Mountains
    Nearly 30 centimetres of snow has blanketed the Whistler-Blackcomb resort north of Vancouver, while Big White, near Kelowna, says 29 centimetres fell there over the last 12 hours.

    B.C. Ski Operators Optimistic After Unusually Early Snowfalls On Many Mountains