CN Rail, union reach quick deal after government threat

The federal government was preparing to stop a strike before it happened

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 13, 2014

Canadian National Railway Co. reached a deal Feb. 5 to avert a strike by conductors and yard workers after the Conservative government said it would use back-to-work legislation to keep the country’s biggest railway operating.

The Teamsters Canada Rail Conference gave notice earlier in the day that it intended to strike as soon as Feb. 8 after members voted against a tentative agreement with Canada’s biggest rail operator.

A new three-year agreement is a modification of the tentative pact reached in October, union general chairman Roland Hackl said.

Read Also

Wheel tracks in a controlled traffic farming barley field

VIDEO: Manitoba farmer tests controlled traffic farming to fight soil compaction and flooding

Manitoba farmer Alex Boersch wants to improve the stability of his crop yields. He’s been experimenting with controlled equipment traffic on his fields

“I’m glad there’s not going to be a strike,” he said, shortly after the deal was reached. He said no details would be released until the deal is ratified.

A work stoppage by about 3,000 conductors, train and yard workers would have disrupted a vast cross-country network that ships goods ranging from lumber and crude oil to grains and automobiles.

Kellie Leitch, the country’s labour minister, had said at a press conference in Ottawa that the government was preparing back-to-work legislation to “protect Canada’s economy and Canadian grain farmers.”

explore

Stories from our other publications