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BC Port Workers Reach Tentative Deal

Tuesday, August 1, 2023 at 7:41 AM

By Meg Polson

An end could be coming to British Columbia’s long-running port dispute.

A breakthrough could herald an end to British Columbia’s long-running port dispute, with the longshore workers’ union and the employers’ association announcing a new tentative agreement.

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada and the BC Maritime Employers Association say the new tentative deal was reached with the assistance of the Canada Industrial Relations Board.

Details of the deal haven’t been released, but both sides say in a joint statement issued Sunday night that they are recommending their members to ratify it.

After workers walked off the job at more than 30 port terminals and other sites for 13 days at the beginning of July, the dispute entered a new phase late Friday when union members rejected a previous potential agreement with employers.

 

On Saturday, Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan announced he was directing the industrial relations board to determine if a negotiated end to the dispute was still possible.

If a deal was not anticipated, O’Regan wanted the board to impose an agreement or final binding arbitration.

Pressure had been mounting for federal intervention if a deal failed to eventuate.

Parties, including Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, the Business Council of Canada and the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, have all urged the federal government to legislate an end to the dispute if it continued.

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The word "éy7á7juuthem" means “Language of our People” and is the ancestral tongue of the Homalco, Tla’amin, Klahoose and K’ómoks First Nations, with dialectic differences in each community.

It is pronounced "eye-ya-jooth-hem."