Transit workers in Sea to Sky region go on strike after dispute over wages and benefits - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:27 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Transit workers in Sea to Sky region go on strike after dispute over wages and benefits

Transit workers in B.C.'s Sea to Sky region, which includes Whistler, Squamishand the Pemberton Valley, have gone on strike after talks collapsed between them and their employers.

80 workers from Whistler, Squamish and the Pemberton Valley went on strike as of 5 a.m. Saturday

Transit workers unionized under Unifor Local 144 in B.C.'s Sea to Sky region have gone on strike on Saturday after talks between them and their employers collapsed. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

Transit workers in B.C.'s Sea to Sky region, which includes Whistler, Squamishand the Pemberton Valley, have gone on strike after talks collapsed between them and their employers.

The strike notice went out on Jan. 21, with 80 workers on job action as of 5 a.m. Saturday. The workers are represented by Unifor Local 114.

Unifor said the workers' employers, who are contractors working under provincial transport authority B.C. Transit, have not yet met requests for better wages, benefits and job security.

Gavin McGarrigle, western regional director of Unifor, said workers in the region are looking to receive benefits like transit workers in Victoria and Vancouver do.

"What we've seen over the years is the housing has gone so far out of control, and the costs so far out of control, that workers' wages simply haven't kept up," he said.

"[The] Whistler area [is] a playground for the rich. But the working people who serve the whole community can't afford to live there."

HandyDART services for people withphysical, sensory or cognitive disabilitieswho need assistance using public transit will continue to run in the area as an essential service.

However, all other transit operations will not be operational. B.C. Transit did not provide a timeline for when transit could resume in the region.

"The labour dispute is between B.C. Transit's contractors Whistler Transit Ltd. and Diversified Transit and their unionized employees," the provincial authority said in a statement.

"B.C. Transit is closely monitoring the situation and hopes the parties will find resolution soon."

McGarrigle said B.C. Transit should "wake up" and provide the benefits the workers are asking for.

"There's only one or two things that have happened here," he said.

"B.C. Transit either hasn't provided enough funding to the contractor to settle for a contract, or the contractor is trying to nickel and dime the workers and take a slice of the profits."

With files from Liam Britten