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Canada Post issues 72-hour lockout notice, work stoppage possible Friday

Canada Post

Canada Post said it intends to lock out its workers starting on Friday after months of negotiations have failed to make a labour deal between the postal carrier and its largest union.

The move comes hours after Canada Post said its latest offer presented on June 25 was fair and reasonable, and that it still hoped to negotiate a deal with the union.

The Crown corporation blamed prolonged negotiations, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers’ strike mandate and the financial cost of a rapid decline in mail volume.

But the 72-hour notice does not necessarily mean the mail will stop being delivered as of Friday.

Rather, Canada Post says, the lockout notice allows the carrier to “take measures that are necessary to respond to the changing business reality.”

Still, both sides say they are hopeful a deal can be reached before Friday.

In its response, CUPW said the corporation is using the lockout notice to drive 50,000 workers “out onto the streets without pay in an effort to impose steep concessions on them.”

“They refused to negotiate fairly with us and now they’re locking the doors and will try to starve us into submission,” said CUPW president Mike Palecek. “Canada Post has been out in the media for weeks saying there’s going to be an interruption and now they’re complaining there’s no mail or parcels in the system,” he told the CBC’s Metro Morning radio show.

“Jeez, I wonder why?”

A key sticking point in negotiations involves changes to employee pension plans. Essentially, the mail service wants to switch new hires to a defined contribution plan, where payouts are not guaranteed. That’s different from the defined benefit plan that current members get, which guarantees a fixed benefit regardless of investment returns.

Canada Post’s pension plan posted an annual surplus of $1.2 billion last year, but has a solvency deficit of almost $6 billion, the fund’s annual report shows.

The Crown corporation said Monday that CUPW’s demands are “not affordable” and would add $1 billion in costs over the life of a new contract. The union disputes that figure and says adding new members paying into the pension and services for customers will pay for themselves.

The union accuses the corporation of creating uncertainty by warning the public to avoid the post office. “We believe they are creating a crisis,” Palecek said. “The position of the pension plan is improving.”

‘Essential’ items will be delivered

Canada Post has said that in the event of a full work disruption, it will not operate — mail and parcels will not be delivered, and no new items will be accepted.

But Ottawa has deemed Old Age Security, Canada Pension Plan, Working Income Tax Benefit and the Canada Child Benefit cheques “essential” — even during a labour disruption.

Spokesman Jon Hamilton said Canada Post has a memorandum of agreement with the union “where the federal socio-economic cheques will be delivered.”

“In the event of a work disruption we would arrange … delivery one day of the month,” he said Monday.

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