05-21-2025 09:15 AM
First off is the Union statement
On Monday, May 19, CUPW issued a 72-hour strike notice to Canada Post. This action was not taken lightly, but it was done for several reasons.
The collective agreements for the Urban Postal Operations and the Rural and Suburban Mail Carriers bargaining units, which were extended by the Government in December 2024, are set to expire Friday, May 23 at midnight.
CUPW negotiators met with Canada Post over several days at the end of April and early May, with the goal of resolving our bargaining dispute and achieving new collective agreements for both bargaining units.
Last week, Canada Post walked away from the bargaining table for the third time, telling the Union it would return with new comprehensive offers. A week has passed. With the expiry of our collective agreements drawing closer by the day, we are still waiting. The clock is ticking, and so far, Canada Post has yet to deliver.
The day after Canada Post walked away and paused bargaining, it fired another shot, by threatening to unilaterally change your working conditions and suspend employee benefits if new agreements aren’t reached. This aggressive move undermines good faith bargaining and the stability of our public postal service. It had to be met with strong resistance. Postal workers won’t be threatened or coerced into accepting offers that will gut our collective agreements and undermine good, stable jobs.
Our right to strike was taken away from us and put on “a time out” by former Minister of Labour Steven MacKinnon’s orders and the Canada Industrial Relations Board in December 2024. By issuing this notice, we are simply announcing our intention to continue our legal strike that was put on pause by the CIRB.
Although we have served notices, there is still time for negotiations to take place. We remain committed to achieving negotiated collective agreements. Your National Executive Board and Negotiating Committees urge Canada Post to return to the bargaining table with real offers that protect the health and well-being of postal workers, support the communities we serve, and ensure a strong and sustainable public postal service for all.
In solidarity,
05-23-2025 07:59 AM
05-23-2025 09:30 AM
@skylarstuff wrote:I, for one, will stay closed as I am uncertain if Canada Post will lock out the employees and then find all my shipments stuck in their facility.
Ditto.
05-23-2025 10:22 AM
Much is true here BUT Canada Post management can't negotiate a contract where there is no hope of eventually at least breaking even. Why? Because operating as a profitable business is in their mandate. Unless the government changes the mandate there has to be big cost reductions. or revenue increases.
Government has to decide if they consider the post office as an essential service because it goes everywhere and subsidize it, or if there is to be major restructuring which will involve changes to compensation packages and work rules that the employees won't like, or subsidizing the post office by adding a tax to other courier services because they don't service all addresses, or if the post office will be sold off and become a private business like happened the UK.
Tough choices. But it should be decided quickly because the uncertainty will further hurt Canada Post and in turn the employees.
05-23-2025 10:23 AM
The Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) has launched a nationwide overtime ban for employees in both the Urban and RSMC (Rural and Suburban Mail Carriers) bargaining units. This is a legal strike action and means that CUPW-represented employees will refuse to work overtime across the company.
As a result, Canada Post will continue operating but customers may experience delays. It’s unclear how CUPW’s strike action may evolve. At this time, there are no rotating strikes or national work stoppage. The Corporation will keep Canadians and businesses informed if strike activity escalates and there are changes to postal operations.
The union issued strike notices earlier this week indicating that it intended to begin strike activity as of Friday, May 23 at 12:00 a.m. local time, unless the parties reached agreements before then. The terms and conditions of employment for CUPW-represented employees in the Urban and RSMC bargaining units have not changed.
On May 21, the Corporation presented CUPW with global offers that increase wages, remove key sticking points and include changes needed to compete in the parcel delivery business. They also reflect the Corporation’s financial and operational realities.
The offer details are available at canadapost.ca/offers. The company is ready to return to the bargaining table as soon as possible to resume negotiations with the assistance of the mediators.
Canada Post has already seen parcel and mail volumes decline significantly as customers prepare for another potential labour disruption.
Further escalation in strike activity would have major impacts on employees, small businesses and the millions of Canadians who rely on the postal system – and deepen the company’s already serious financial situation. It is critical that both parties focus their energies on resolving issues to reach negotiated agreements.
05-23-2025 10:37 AM
Can anyone confirm whether ebay is still blocking the Canada Post option?
05-23-2025 10:51 AM
While lacking a legal definition as an essential service, Canada Post is widely seen as providing one, particularly for rural communities, and the federal government has acted to maintain its operations. During the pandemic, Canada Post was officially listed as an essential service and function. The Government should permanently make Canada Post an essential service. That way, they can not walk out of their jobs. But still be able to strike after work or on weekends when not working. This is the way it is in the USA, where postal workers are deemed essential workers.
05-23-2025 10:59 AM
05-23-2025 07:38 PM
Friday May 23 2025
Today, May 23, is the first day of a nationwide overtime ban. As of 12:01 a.m. today, members were called on to refuse to work more than eight hours a day and more than 40 hours a week. This is a legal strike action and all CUPW members must follow this direction.
Although Canada Post has stated that as of now, our collective agreements are still in effect and the terms and conditions of our employment have not changed, this could change at any time. Because we are on a legal strike, Canada Post does not have to provide a 72-hour lockout notice.
This is why we proposed a two-week truce. It would have provided our negotiators the time to thoroughly analyze and reply to the over 700-page offers from Canada Post, while ensuring stability for workers and the public. Since Canada Post refused, instability continues to loom over these negotiations.
We’ve already heard from members that some supervisors have said that the collective agreements are no longer valid or that the overtime ban is already done. In some locations, full-timers have been told they can do 17.04 on another route as long as they do all the work inside eight (8) hours. All of this is false information. If the Employer states there are any changes to the strike action, your working conditions or your collective agreements, you should confirm this with the Union, as proper notice must be given.
Since the overtime ban is part of a legal strike action, the Employer cannot discipline you for refusing to do overtime. We ask all Locals to keep track of any violations to the collective agreement and provide that information to their National Directors.
Your negotiating committees continue to review Canada Post’s offers and are preparing the Union’s response. The Union expects to meet with Canada Post and the mediators this weekend to continue working towards ratifiable collective agreements.
Remember: Your Union is the most reliable and accurate source of information about Negotiations. Please stay tuned for future updates to keep yourself informed.
Your Negotiators thank all members for their ongoing support!
In solidarity,
05-24-2025 07:11 AM - edited 05-24-2025 07:12 AM
05-25-2025 01:29 PM
05-25-2025 01:54 PM
It's interesting that the union negotiator is saying they don't really want to pull the trigger and go on strike, even though they said Monday that they could since giving the notice to Canada Post. After today's meeting, depending on how it goes. Maybe time to open eBay store again? What do you think?
05-25-2025 02:34 PM
@skylarstuff wrote:It's interesting that the union negotiator is saying they don't really want to pull the trigger and go on strike, even though they said Monday that they could since giving the notice to Canada Post. After today's meeting, depending on how it goes. Maybe time to open eBay store again? What do you think?
The union negotiator also says they want a deal while originally calling Canada Post's financial claims false, then basically doing the same thing when the independent report came out.
I don't think they want to fully strike because I think they know whatever contract they eventually get will be less adventageous than the one they have now. I suspect Canada Post will eventually lock them out and force a resolution because they frankly have to. Better for it to happen now than in the fall or Christmas season. They also can't afford to keep bleeding money the way they are, which will happen if it drags on.
05-25-2025 06:10 PM - edited 05-25-2025 06:11 PM
I think this uncertainty is bad for Canada Post and us. No one wants to use it for fear that the mail will get stuck, so postal sales have gone down. I think that if the union and Canada Post can't reach an agreement today, Canada Post should do a lock out until the union can agree on the hiring of part timers. They also need to do a complete overhaul of the whole postal system, door to door delivery every day is not necessary. They propably need to get rid of at least 10 percent of the staff. Many years ago friends who worked for the post office as letter carriers felt it was a really easy job where, they would finish their delivery by noon (4 hours) or so and then go home but were paid for a full day. Now I don't know if that still happens today, that's why I was so surpised to hear about overtime, maybe in the depots but not letter carriers.
05-25-2025 07:04 PM
Union negotiators and the National Executive Board spent the last few days, and nights, reviewing the Employer’s last offers and preparing responses to issues in the offers and issues important to the Union that the Employer failed to acknowledge.
On Sunday, the third day of a nationwide overtime ban, the parties met with Federal Mediation and Conciliation Services just outside of Ottawa. At 9:30 a.m., the Union provided our concepts and details to the mediators, and they presented the positions to Canada Post. Not meeting face-to-face and the mediators moving between the parties is a method used by experienced mediators to remove the opposing personalities and animosity from the interaction.
All of this was done through the standard process in mediation called: the integrative approach. Documents and ideas exchanged during the integrative approach are confidential and cannot be used against that party at any subsequent arbitration or any other legal proceeding. This privacy allows both parties to talk about issues they may not otherwise entertain.
Issues like wages, cost of living allowance, sick days, STDP, workers compensation, compensatory time, relief staff, staffing, contracting out, weekend delivery, and part-time usage were involved.
At 12:50 p.m., the Union was informed that the Employer had left the facility to review the documents and we were told they may respond within a few days. We would hope the Corporation is back to us as soon as possible.
Although talks continue, the nationwide overtime ban remains in effect.
The Negotiators thank all members for their continued support. Your actions are making a difference!
In solidarity,
05-25-2025 07:06 PM
@musicyouneed wrote:I think this uncertainty is bad for Canada Post and us. No one wants to use it for fear that the mail will get stuck, so postal sales have gone down. I think that if the union and Canada Post can't reach an agreement today, Canada Post should do a lock out until the union can agree on the hiring of part timers. They also need to do a complete overhaul of the whole postal system, door to door delivery every day is not necessary. They propably need to get rid of at least 10 percent of the staff. Many years ago friends who worked for the post office as letter carriers felt it was a really easy job where, they would finish their delivery by noon (4 hours) or so and then go home but were paid for a full day. Now I don't know if that still happens today, that's why I was so surpised to hear about overtime, maybe in the depots but not letter carriers.
I'm in favour of a lock out (or strike) to put pressure on getting this resolved. So far all they're doing is dragging it out and extending the uncertainty for small businesses. If you were going to keep shipping anyway and not concerned about stuff getting stuck, then what's happening is probably a good thing because mail is still moving. But I'm on time away (on this store) until this is resolved, so having a long drawn out affair is just prolonging the time it will take for me to be able to start selling again.
C.
05-25-2025 07:19 PM
I am reposting a previous message I posted a few days ago. I think that Canada Post should hit the nuclear button. What do I mean? Tell the union that unless they accept the current offer and get back to work, all existing offers are off the table. If nothing happens, offer them a new deal where 30K postal workers lose their jobs as there will no longer be door-to-door delivery, and many post offices closed and replaced with franchised ones. I know my idea is a fantasy, but this stuff needs to stop. Post Office needs to do something now..........lock them out. Then let the union see what happens with what comes next.
Interesting video, at 3:50 into the video, a professor from Carlton University who has studied Canada Post for many years. He believes that 30 to 40K of Postal workers will become redundant. Many Post Offices will shut down as no one is hardly using them. Coupled with the fact that mail delivery to households will stop.
05-25-2025 08:31 PM
Totally agree with you. The union is way too powerful for the post office. Close her down and take away most of their benefits, run it like a business. We as small business people have to adapt, what I did/sold in 2002 is not the same as now.
05-25-2025 09:29 PM
I agree, Canada Post needs to undergo a major reorganization asap ... the status quo is quickly destroying their customer base. Our rural Ontario post offices were still fairly busy up until last year's strike ... but I've noticed a dramatic drop-off in numbers this year. For many months now there hasn't been any line-ups whatsoever at the counter, and there are not parcels stacked behind, and on, the counter as used to be the norm. Staff has been reduced as well, the village offices around here are all down to a single clerk.
Door-to-door delivery has to end everywhere including to rural mailboxes, they must lose a lot of money running those little city delivery vans up and down our gravel sideroads!
05-25-2025 10:37 PM
Not only the rural postal offices are suffering but city post offices too. Most run in North Vancouver out of a Shoppers Drug Mart or a small Mom & Pop shop, they are never busy now. I know that staff have been cut and their hours have been reduced. The PO is putting itself out of business. In about a 15 minute walk I have 3 postal outlets available. They must have to pay them to provide postal services.
05-25-2025 11:11 PM - edited 05-25-2025 11:12 PM
Ive heard that if they finish their run (even if early), they can get ahead for next day deliveries and that count as overtime (even if within their 8 hours day).
Not sure if thats true...