BCMEA calling on Industrial Relations Board to prevent longshore foremen strike

B.C.’s Maritime Employers Association is calling on Canada’s Industrial Relations Board to prevent a strike of ship and dock foremen.

It also says it plans to issue an industry-wide lockout, should the workers go on strike, which would effectively shut down all of the association’s cargo operations in B.C.

On Friday, the BCMEA said ILWU Local 514 — the union representing hundreds of the province’s ship and dock foremen — issued a 72-hour notice of intended strike against terminal operator company DP World (Canada) Inc.

CityNews has made multiple attempts to reach the union for confirmation.

According to a BCMEA news release earlier this week, the union plans to be on the picket line starting Monday.

ILWU 514, which represents close to 600 workers, has been negotiating since November 2022 and is asking for wage increases and retirement benefits, among other demands.

The Industrial Relations Board was already set to commence hearings this week to address these complaints.

The ILWU said in a statement last month that 99 per cent of foremen who voted were against a “final offer” from the employers association.

Local 514 president Frank Morena said at the time that DP World Canada told them in December it would unilaterally introduce some automation at its rail intermodal yard at the Centerm port in Vancouver.

The BCMEA says they had previously offered a 19.2 per cent wage increase and are disappointed with the move.

Last year, B.C.’s port workers went on strike in July over wages, benefits, and training issues. In August, a contract covering 7,400 workers in the province was approved by the union after it had rejected a mediated settlement twice. The BCMEA said at the time that the collective agreement reached included increases in wages and benefits as well as training.

At the time, the Vancouver Board of Trade issued a statement saying an estimated $10 billion worth of trade was disrupted during the strike.

With files from The Canadian Press.

Source