Truckers reject Vancouver port deal: strike to begin Monday
Picket lines go up after 98% of unionized truckers vote in favour of strike action
Unionized container truck drivers at Port Metro Vancouver have voted to reject a tentative deal drawn up Thursday by veteran labour mediator Vince Ready, and are set to go on strike Monday.
Gavin McGarrigle, B.C. area director of the Unifor-Vancouver Container Truckers’ Association, said 98 per cent of the more than 300 unionized members voted against it.
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"The immediate economics of the situation for our members is just intolerable. That's why they gave us the result they did today," he said.
McGarrigle said port authorities can expect a combination of picket and protest lines today at entrances to port facilities and at employers' offices.
"This will have an immediate impact on the ports because there won't be a lot of container truck traffic moving — this is almost 50 per cent of the traffic," McGarrigle said.
Paul Johal, president of Unifor-VCTA, says the truck drivers are concerned about long lineups and wait times at Port Metro Vancouver's facilities, which he said is costing the drivers money and leading to longer days.
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“Our members have spoken: the deal [offered last week] was too little, too late,” Johal said in a written statement on Saturday.
The union is demanding increased pay rates that would be standardized and enforced across the trucking sector to put an end to under-cutting.
The union says the average rate of pay for truckers moving containers to or from Port Metro Vancouver is $15.59 an hour, whereas the average rate of pay in the B.C. trucking industry is $23 an hour.
The Unifor-VCTA members already voted in favour of a strike on March 1 and had threatened to walk out at noon Thursday, but agreed to discuss their outstanding issues after Ready was appointed by federal Transport Minister Lisa Raitt.
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About $885-million worth of cargo moves through the port every week, or about $46 billion a year, Raitt's office said Thursday in a statement on the dispute.
The port said it was already feeling the effects of work stoppages begun by some non-unionized truckers — effects that would be worsened with unionized truckers following-through with job action.
Corrections
- A previous version of this story mistakenly said French fries are the #1 processed food imported by container at Port Metro Vancouver. They are actually the #1 processed food exported by container.Mar 10, 2014 11:49 AM EDT