Delmar International, a Quebec-based logistics firm that counts 1,500 employees across 17 countries, said all Montreal-bound freight will now flow through the Port of Halifax in a pre-emptive move to curtail fallout from possible job action.
âWhile uncertainties persist at the Port of Montreal, Delmar International will reroute all East Coast Montreal-bound cargo via Halifax to limit any negative impact of a potential work stoppage until further notice,â the company told customers in a post last week.
Earlier this month, the Canada Industrial Relations Board dismissed a request from Montreal port employers to require employees to work during a strike, opening the gate to a job action or lockout after a six-month freeze while the ask was under consideration. That freeze ended with the boardâs decision on March 14.
On Friday, the Maritime Employers Association followed up with a complaint to the labour board that called on it to rekindle talks due to a âbad faithâ stance by the union, which it claims has refused to resume bargaining.
âThe parties are at an impasse caused by the unionâs refusal to negotiate,â the submission said in French.
âThe association is contacting the CIRB to urgently obtain a hearing and remedies to force the union to comply with its obligations and thus allow the resumption of negotiations.â
The last meeting between the two sides took place on Jan. 16, according to the filing.Association spokeswoman Isabelle Pelletier said employers are âvery worriedâ about the consequences of mounting fears that a strike is looming.
âWe have strong signals that cargo will be rerouted because of the uncertainty at the Port of Montreal,â she said in an email.
The employers, who in their complaint blamed the workers for âscaring awayâ cargo, noted that they continue to pay employees including those not on the job amid a fall in freight volumes â an âuntenable situationâ as revenue drops in lockstep with the decrease, the association said.
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Container shipments fell nearly nine per cent last year, according to tonnage data from the port.
The dockworkersâ union, which represents roughly 1,200 Montreal port workers affiliated with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, declined to comment. Wednesday marked the deadline to respond to the employersâ labour board complaint.The collective agreement expired on Dec. 31.
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Exploring North Americaâs labour unrest during a âsummer of strikesâ
Canadaâs maritime supply chain has faced several labour disruptions over the past four years, on top of the backlogs and bottlenecks of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Last summer, a strike by 7,400 B.C. dockworkers dragged on for 13 days, shutting down the countryâs biggest port and costing the economy billions of dollars.
In October, an eight-day strike by employees on the locks of the St. Lawrence Seaway halted shipments of grain, iron ore and gasoline along the trade corridor.
And in Montreal, longshore workers last went on strike in August 2020 in a 12-day job action that left 11,500 containers languishing on the waterfront.
Mutual suspicion persists to this day after that standoff, observers say.Federal Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez on Monday pointed to an apparent âclimate of mistrustâ between the dockworkers and the Maritime Employers Association, which represents shippers and terminal operators.
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Others echoed his concerns.
âItâs getting to be an acute situation,â said Julia Kuzeljevich, spokeswoman for the Canadian International Freight Forwarders Association.
âThere are great fears that theyâll do a 72-hour strike notice at any point,â she said.
âMany people are choosing to divert cargo ⌠Itâs just a big question mark hanging over the situation.â
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Before hitting the picket lines, the union would have to hold a strike mandate vote, which it can do at any time. If the vote is successful, job action could kick off three days after executives give the word.
Large retailers would be among the hardest hit by a disruption, said Bob Ballantyne, a senior adviser at the Freight Management Association of Canada, whose nearly 60 members include Canadian Tire Corp., Hudsonâs Bay Co. and Home Depot Canada.
âIn advance, theyâll start making other arrangements. I suspect a number of our big retailers and other importers will have already started to do that,â Ballantyne said.
âTheyâll be looking at rerouting primarily to the ports of Halifax and St. John, N.B.âMeanwhile, labour tensions are also simmering just down the line in the transport sector.
Canadaâs two main railways this month resumed talks with the union representing about 9,200 conductors, engineers and yard workers, a back-and-forth overseen by federal mediators since March 1.
A mandated 60-day period of mediated negotiations followed by a 21-day cooling-off period means a work stoppage at either Canadian National Railway Co. or Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. could begin as soon as May 21.
In November 2019, a rail strike gripped the country for eight days until CN and 3,000 railroaders reached a tentative deal, ending a job action that halted shipments, triggered layoffs and disrupted industries across the country.
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