“They did it with no warning. They trapped the public’s mail. It’s unacceptable.”-Denis Lemelin, Canadian Union of Postal Workers
Canada Post shut down all urban mail service today, June 15, after more than a week of strikes by 15,000 postal workers. Ironically Canada Post officials say the shut down is meant to keep them from losing more money: “The price tag was climbing. It was reaching $100 million. We need to do something to jump start the negotiations.”-Anick Losier, Canada Post spokeswoman
If you’re losing money because workers aren’t at work, how do you make that better by shutting down altogether? On top of that Union officials say they reached an agreement with Canada Post bosses and were heading back to work, when they were ‘locked out’: “All postal workers were ready to distribute mail across the country.”-Denis Lemelin, Canadian Union of Postal Workers
So from 15,000 striking postal workers to now 48,000 unemployed postal workers because of Canada Post’s lock out.
Add to the postal workers strike the strike by employees of Air Canada. Today, 3,800 workers walked off the job. Many travelers are being forced to use other air lines.
What’s the main motivation behind the two huge strikes in Canada? Retirement benefits: “We’re Canadians. We deserve our pensions. We’ve worked hard for them.”-Loretta Pasqualini, 30 year employee with Air Canada
Air Canada and Canada Post wants to drastically slash worker’s retirement benefits, as well as other things like pay. Canada Post says they have to cut costs because they’ve been losing money. They blame the internet (very similar to what’s going on with the U.S. Postal Service).
Air Canada strikers started to leave their picket lines when security/police started taking pictures of them. Also, the Canadian government is meeting today to come up with a plan that will force workers back to work, and end collective bargaining!