postal strike

Mail delivery on hold across Canada as postal strike resumes

Mail delivery on hold across Canada as postal strike resumes

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Canadians will have to do without mail delivery until further notice. The Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) declared an indefinite general strike on Sept. 25.

CUPW members have been without a collective agreement since August 2024, and first walked off the job in November of that year. At the height of the holiday shopping season, then-labour minister Steven MacKinnon referred the dispute to the Canadian Industrial Relations Board (CIRB), which ruled that the two parties were at an impasse. Postal workers were ordered back to work on Dec. 17, and continued work until May 22 under the existing agreement, while negotiations went on with the aid of a mediator. When that deadline passed, as negotiations ground on, the union declared an overtime strike, but continued daily mail delivery.

That tenuous stopgap arrangement came to an abrupt end on Sept. 25, shortly after Minister for Public Services and Procurement Joël Lightbound announced the federal government’s restructuring plan for Canada Post.

The plan Lightbound laid out, based on recommendations from CIRB negotiator William Kaplan, included the end of daily mail delivery, the phasing out of almost all door-to-door delivery in favour of community mailboxes over the next decade, lifting a 30-year-old moratorium on the closure of rural post offices, raising the cost of stamps, asking Canada Post Corporation (CPC) to “take another look” at its management structure and conducting a detailed review of the corporation’s activities to identify where costs can be cut and activities adapted. “I’m instructing Canada Post to come back with a plan that will ensure protection for [services in] rural, remote and Indigenous communities,” he added. “Canada Post has an obligation to serve every community in Canada, and that will not change.”

Within hours of Lightbound’s announcement, CUPW locals in Atlantic Canada declared a general strike, followed by locals in the rest of the country. In a statement, CUPW national president Jan Simpson called Lightbound’s plan “an outrage.”

Simpson accused Lightbound of springing the plan on postal workers with insufficient advance notice and dodging questions about potential job losses. “This slapdash approach without full public consultation is an insult to the public and to postal workers,” she said.

In a statement, CPC warned Canadians to expect delivery delays, noting that an essential services agreement was in place to ensure delivery of social assistance cheques and live animals.

“We’re disappointed that the union chose to escalate their strike activity, which will further deteriorate Canada Post’s financial situation,” the corporation said.

Stéphane Genest is the president of CUPW local 370, which represents postal workers in the greater Quebec City region, Beauce, Charlevoix and Chaudière-Appalaches. He told the QCT the announcement of a new strike came as a total surprise to local mail carriers. Members “are very disappointed, but I don’t know if we could have done things any differently.” Genest said he hoped the government and CPC would take the opportunity to expand CPC’s operations into new sectors – such as banking – instead of cutting services. “We’re not blind, we know letter mail volumes are going down … but we have the impression that [CPC and the government] want to go toward privatization instead of finding solutions.” Genest said that in his 22 years as a mail carrier, there has never been a negotiated collective agreement between CUPW and CPC. “The last signed agreement is from the 1990s. Since then, Canada Post has always gone crying to the government [for arbitration],” he said. “I’m impatient to see their response to the strike.”

Lightbound, who represents the Quebec City riding of Louis- Hébert in Parliament, did not respond to a request for further comment from the QCT by press time; nor did CPC.

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Postal strike hampers charity fundraising campaigns

Postal strike hampers charity fundraising campaigns

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Local nonprofits which rely heavily on year-end postal donation campaigns are having to get creative amid the ongoing postal strike.

The Quebec Community Christmas Hamper Campaign has gotten used to dealing with the unexpected. After COVID precautions forced the elves at Hamper Headquarters to rework donation and delivery procedures in 2020, 2021 and 2022, a teachers’ strike last year required them to move operations from the Eastern Québec Learning Centre to the Jeffery Hale Pavilion on short notice. Now, the postal workers’ strike has slowed donations and put yet another wrench in the works.

“About a third of the donations we receive – 35 per cent – are through cheques in the mail, so it is pretty significant,” said campaign spokesperson Brigitte Wellens. “This time last year, we were at over $20,000 in donations, and this year we’re at about $16,000, so we’re quite a bit lower than where we normally are.

“We were hoping for a positive resolution [to the strike] before the holidays, but we were already thinking that we might have to find alternative measures for people to donate,” Wellens said, adding that she expects an uptick in donations after the strike ends, as cheques put in the mail before Nov. 15 find their way to Hamper Headquarters. She encouraged those who haven’t yet donated to consider donating online, dropping donations off at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church or the Jeffery Hale Pavilion, or calling Hamper Headquarters at 418-684-5333, ext. 11835 to discuss alternative ways to contribute. Financial donations are used to bulk-buy staples like flour, sugar, coffee and produce that go into each hamper, while donations of nonperishable food are used to top up the hampers. (Expired, opened or homemade items cannot be accepted. Breakfast cereal and canned soup, meat, fish and fruit are especially appreciated.)

Wellens emphasized that even if the campaign raises less money than expected between now and Delivery Day, delivering fewer hampers is not an option. “Times are tough. There has been a 15 per cent increase in demand. Some people are asking for a hamper for the first time, and we don’t know their stories, but my guess would be that they’re working full time and having a hard time making ends meet. The hamper is a big help during the holiday season. We’re in a situation where we might just have to run a deficit for a while after getting all the food.” Wellens expects that over 260 households will receive hampers this year.

At the Société protectrice des animaux de Québec, the city’s largest animal protection nonprofit, director general Karina Painchaud and her team have called up a small army of volunteers to drop off and pick up envelopes for the organization’s annual campaign at donors’ houses.

“We’re 150 years old, and the mailing campaign has had a privileged place for many of those years,” Painchaud told the QCT. “Our goal this year is to send out at least 2,000 letters. I’ve signed them all by hand!”

“Like a lot of nonprofits, we have this issue of distributing [appeals for donations] through the mail. Being confronted with the strike, we had to reinvent ourselves and find a solution. What we did was call on people’s generosity in terms of time; we asked volunteer elves to distribute the mail. Nine people distributed half of our cargo, and we’re still looking for a few elves!” she said. Like Wellens, Painchaud said the campaign has received fewer donations than this time last year.

Painchaud is also encouraging those who can to donate online or drop their cheques off at SPA headquarters on Avenue Galilée in Les Saules. Donations allow the SPA to feed, house and care for the 7,500 vulnerable cats and dogs the organization takes in every year.

Negotiations ongoing

Disagreements over wage increases, health and safety concerns and weekend de- livery staffing and schedules have hampered negotiations between the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) and Canada Post. On Dec. 8, Canada Post released a statement saying it was “still waiting” for the union’s response to its latest proposals.

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