QUEBEC AND ONTARIO ASK OTTAWA TO INTERVENE IN MONTREAL PORT STRIKE

Aug 17, 2020

By Jeremy Logan

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The Quebec and Ontario governments are asking Ottawa to intervene in the Montreal port strike, which is now in its second week.

The provinces’ labour and economic development ministers say in a letter to the federal government that the shutdown will harm Eastern Canada’s economy and erode the competitiveness of a port that generates $2.6 billion in annual economic activity.

Quebec Labour Minister Jean Boulet says the strike is further aggravating an economic crisis sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The letter to federal Labour Minister Filomena Tassi and Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains comes after Tassi rejected last week a request from more than a half-dozen industry groups to force the resumption of port activities, citing “faith in the collective bargaining process.”

Port employers say the strike, launched on August 10th, has so far diverted eight container ships to Halifax, Saint John, New Brunswick, and New York City, impacting thousands of importers and exporters.

The labour action by more than 1,100 dockworkers, who have been without a collective agreement for nearly two years, revolves largely around wages and scheduling, with the union saying longshoremen routinely work 19 days out of 21 due to heavy traffic through the port.

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