Public Inquiries into Emergencies Act begin September 19

Serryah

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 3, 2008
10,010
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New Brunswick
So, are railways an essential service?
(sorry about the CBC link, as I’m trying to find sources closer to the middle, but only found this CBC story)

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says his party would oppose any government intervention in the ongoing labour dispute between Canada's two main rail companies and unions as the deadline to avoid an unprecedented service shutdown approaches, etc…

Sadly in Canada, they're not. That's obvious by the shitshow that rail service of all kinds is. It SHOULD be though but no one wants to 'invest' in it.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Double railway strike could devastate small business: CFIB
Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Aug 19, 2024 • Last updated 19 hours ago • 2 minute read

Canada’s largest advocate for independent businesses is warning that impending work stoppages at Canada’s two major freight railways would “paralyze” the country’s economy.


As the clock ticks down on an impending — and unprecedented — lockout of Teamsters members at CN and an impending strike at CPKC (Canadian Pacific Kansas City) railways, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) is calling on the railways and the union to reach a deal before it’s too late.

“Any disruptions to railway operations could be devastating for small businesses, their employees and communities,” said Jasmin Guenette, the CFIB’s vice-president of national affairs.

“Many small businesses rely on rail services to send and receive goods, products and essential materials. The longer the work stoppage goes on, the costlier it becomes for small firms who may lose sales and contracts if goods are not delivered or received on time.”



With the two railways set to sideline their over 9,000 running trades employees — engineers, conductors and yard personnel — at one minute after midnight on Thursday, the two companies have already started halting shipments in preparation of a Canada-wide network shutdown, including CN halting container imports from the United States — as well as curtailing shipments of perishable or refrigerated cargo.

Teamsters officials representing CPKC workers issued their 72-hour strike notice on Sunday, shortly before CN promised to lock-out their Teamsters workers on Thursday.


“Unless there is an immediate and definite resolution to the labour conflict, CN will have no choice but to continue the phased and progressive shutdown of its network which would culminate in a lockout,” the railway said in a press release over the weekend.

Hopes that Ottawa would stop the lockout before it began were dashed last week, when Federal Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon dismissed calls to impose binding arbitration.

Similar to what was seen in 2020, when Canada-wide railway blockades by First Nations activists prompted nationwide shutdowns, supplies of chlorine for municipal water treatment have also been halted.

This could spell issues for drinking water across the country and many parts of the United States, as commercial-quantities of the dangerous element is typically only transported by rail car.

In a statement Monday, Minister MacKinnon urged both parties to continue their negotiations.

“These collective bargaining negotiations belong to CN Rail, CPKC and the TCRC (Teamsters Canada Rail Conference) alone, but their efforts will be borne by all Canadians,” the Minister said.

“The parties much do the hard work necessary to reach agreements at the bargaining table and prevent a full work stoppage. Canadians expect the parties’ efforts to be equal to the trust conferred on them.”

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,256
12,777
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Low Earth Orbit
Double railway strike could devastate small business: CFIB
Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Aug 19, 2024 • Last updated 19 hours ago • 2 minute read

Canada’s largest advocate for independent businesses is warning that impending work stoppages at Canada’s two major freight railways would “paralyze” the country’s economy.


As the clock ticks down on an impending — and unprecedented — lockout of Teamsters members at CN and an impending strike at CPKC (Canadian Pacific Kansas City) railways, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) is calling on the railways and the union to reach a deal before it’s too late.

“Any disruptions to railway operations could be devastating for small businesses, their employees and communities,” said Jasmin Guenette, the CFIB’s vice-president of national affairs.

“Many small businesses rely on rail services to send and receive goods, products and essential materials. The longer the work stoppage goes on, the costlier it becomes for small firms who may lose sales and contracts if goods are not delivered or received on time.”



With the two railways set to sideline their over 9,000 running trades employees — engineers, conductors and yard personnel — at one minute after midnight on Thursday, the two companies have already started halting shipments in preparation of a Canada-wide network shutdown, including CN halting container imports from the United States — as well as curtailing shipments of perishable or refrigerated cargo.

Teamsters officials representing CPKC workers issued their 72-hour strike notice on Sunday, shortly before CN promised to lock-out their Teamsters workers on Thursday.


“Unless there is an immediate and definite resolution to the labour conflict, CN will have no choice but to continue the phased and progressive shutdown of its network which would culminate in a lockout,” the railway said in a press release over the weekend.

Hopes that Ottawa would stop the lockout before it began were dashed last week, when Federal Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon dismissed calls to impose binding arbitration.

Similar to what was seen in 2020, when Canada-wide railway blockades by First Nations activists prompted nationwide shutdowns, supplies of chlorine for municipal water treatment have also been halted.

This could spell issues for drinking water across the country and many parts of the United States, as commercial-quantities of the dangerous element is typically only transported by rail car.

In a statement Monday, Minister MacKinnon urged both parties to continue their negotiations.

“These collective bargaining negotiations belong to CN Rail, CPKC and the TCRC (Teamsters Canada Rail Conference) alone, but their efforts will be borne by all Canadians,” the Minister said.

“The parties much do the hard work necessary to reach agreements at the bargaining table and prevent a full work stoppage. Canadians expect the parties’ efforts to be equal to the trust conferred on them.”

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume
Farmers get hit the hardest.
 
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spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Looming railway shutdown disastrous for chemical industry, say stakeholders
Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Aug 20, 2024 • Last updated 16 hours ago • 2 minute read

OTTAWA — With Canada’s two largest freight railways preparing for an extended work stoppage, the chemical industry is sounding the alarm.


Over 9,000 railway engineers, conductors and yard workers will be off the job on Thursday, as talks between the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC) and both CN and Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) show no signs of resolution.

This unprecedented work stoppage, says Bob Masterson, president and CEO of the Chemistry Industry Association of Canada, will prove devastating to the country’s chemical producers.

“Devastating may not be a strong enough word,” Masterson said.

“We have had many strikes, disruptions and blockades in recent years, and port strikes as well, but we’ve never seen a situation where both Class 1 railways are out of service at the same time.”

If both CN and CPKC shut down this Thursday, Masterson said the effects will be far-reaching.


“This will shut down the entire trade infrastructure in the country,” he said.

“Every port, every railway — that’s it.”

That’s a big deal for Canada’s chemical industry, Masterson said, which ships about $100 billion in product annually — with an appreciable portion destined for export.

“Eighty per cent of that moves by rail,” Masterson said, which equates to about 500 rail tanker cars shipped daily.

“So if it doesn’t move, we’ve got a problem.”

Despite the work stoppage still being days away, chemical producers are already feeling the impacts.

Some chemicals, including chlorine, can’t be transported by road.

That’s a huge problem, Masterson said, considering chlorine from Canadian plants supplies thousands of water treatment plants in both Canada and the U.S., who are now scrambling to find alternatives.


“There is no plan B for anyone in our industry,” he said.

“If you could theoretically replace those with tanker trucks on the road, you’re talking well over 1,500 trucks — even for our industry alone there aren’t 1,500 extra trucks, there certainly aren’t 1,500 extra drivers.”

Both CN and CPKC halted picking up chlorine rail cars on Aug. 11, Masterson said.

Plant shutdowns are possible if the strike drags on, Masterson said — pointing out that restarting those plants once shipments resume could take days or even weeks.

The work stoppage will also impact Canada’s smaller branch railways, who exclusively rely on interchanging freight cars with larger railways.

While the unions and railways stagger their contract negotiations to prevent nationwide shutdowns, a year-long contract extension granted to CN meant collective agreements with both CN and CPKC expired at the end of last year.

TCRC issued a 72-hour strike notice on Monday, while CN said it would lock workers out on Thursday if no deal was reached.

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
26,153
9,556
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Emergencies Act 2.0? It gave them an uptick in the polls the last time, and they enacted it for a whole lot less…
…& I’m not advocating they do this, but if so, he would be the first Prime Minister to do it twice, & still the only Prime Minister’s who each have done it are both named Trudeau.
 
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Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Emergencies Act 2.0? It gave them an uptick in the polls the last time, and they enacted it for a whole lot less…
…& I’m not advocating they do this, but if so, he would be the first Prime Minister to do it twice, & still the only Prime Minister’s who each have done it are both named Trudeau.
Pretty much why my buddy Rudolph Hitler figured he'd never make it in politics.

Shoulda been born Canadian.