Brad Woodside hopes for transit deal without job action - Action News
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New Brunswick

Brad Woodside hopes for transit deal without job action

Fredericton Mayor Brad Woodside is expressing hope a new deal can be reached with the city's transit workers without either the city or the union needing to take job action, such as a lockout or strike.

Transit workers will vote on the City of Fredericton's final contract offer on Sunday

Fredericton Mayor Brad Woodside says the city's final offer to transit workers is a fair one.

With Fredericton Transit workers set to take a strike vote on Sunday, Mayor Brad Woodside is expressing hope a new deal can be reached without either the city or the union needing to take job action, such as a lockout or strike.

The main issue in the dispute is wages as Fredericton Transit drivers are paid less than their counterparts in Moncton and Saint John.

Fredericton drivers make $22 an hour, which is $2.44 an hour less than drivers for Codiac Transpo and about $4 an hour less than drivers in Saint John.

Frredericton Transit drivers are seeking wage parity with their counterparts in Moncton, who make $2.44 more an hour. (CBC)
Fredericton's final offer to the drivers is a 1.75 per cent increase in each of the first three years of a new contractand 2.5 per cent annual increases in each of the final two years of a five-year deal.

"We believe that the offer being made to our transit workers is a good one," said Woodside in a statement.

"It is above current and projected inflation and it would not be a responsibleuse of taxpayers' money to offer more."

The city's offer would also increase the employees biweekly benefits allowance by $25, bringing it to $200.

I am hopeful that neither side will have to take job action in this matter.- Fredericton MayorBrad Woodside

The offer contains the same percentage increases that were accepted by the city's outside workers and inside workers in 2015.

The bus drivers, inside workers and outside workers are all represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, with the transit workers belonging to Local 1783.

"We value the work done by our transit workers and have bargained in good faith," said Woodside.

"I am hopeful that neither side will have to take job action in this matter."

If the transit workers reject the city's offer in Sunday's vote, it would put them in a legal strike position. Results of the vote will be known Monday, said the union.

In 2012, the City of Moncton locked out its transit workers. It was five months before buses were back on the street.