CP arbitration ends in two-year deal for engineers, conductors

Dispute led to rail service outage in March

Published: August 16, 2022

,

(File photo by Dave Bedard)

Mediation and arbitration hearings over the weekend have ended in a two-year labour deal for engineers, conductors and train and yard service staff at Canadian Pacific Railway.

The agreement puts a formal lid on the latest round of contract disputes between Calgary-based CP and its 3,000-odd unionized employees represented by the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC).

Those disputes peaked in a two-and-a-half-day work stoppage ending March 22, when the company and union agreed to go to binding arbitration to settle sticking points left unresolved in bargaining.

Read Also

Photo: PhonlamaiPhoto/Getty Images Plus

AI is transforming weather forecasting − and that could be a game changer for farmers around the world

In many low- and middle-income countries, accurate weather forecasts remain out of reach, limited by the high technology costs and infrastructure demands of traditional forecasting models. A new wave of AI-powered weather forecasting models has the potential to change that.

The new agreement, as laid out Monday by arbitrator William Kaplan, runs through to the end of 2023.

It provides wage increases of 3.5 per cent for each of 2022 and 2023, plus increases of three and 2.4 per cent to employees’ maximum disability and annual dental benefits respectively.

Kaplan’s binding decision was announced Monday after mediation on Friday and Saturday and a two-day hearing Sunday and Monday.

The arbitrator’s decision also calls for the TCRC to enter an agreement with CP on a pension improvement account (PIA) by the end of next month; the PIA would cover a six-year period ending Jan. 1, 2024 at the earliest.

The decision also updates the amount of time employees serving as union officials or reps can book for rest after taking leave to attend to union business.

CP CEO Keith Creel said Monday the company “welcomes the conclusion of arbitration and is pleased to have completed this agreement.”

TCRC brass, in a separate memo to its CP membership on Monday, said they would review Kaplan’s decisions and provide comments to local chairpersons and the membership “in the very near future.” — Glacier FarmMedia Network

About the author

Dave Bedard

Dave Bedard

Editor, Grainews

Farm-raised in northeastern Saskatchewan. B.A. Journalism 1991. Local newspaper reporter in Saskatchewan turned editor and farm writer in Winnipeg. (Life story edited by author for time and space.)

explore

Stories from our other publications