Rail strike leaves 2,000 employees jobless
Posted: 26 July 2009 1030 hrs
Via Rail employees
MONTREAL: Canadian national carrier Via Rail on Saturday temporarily laid off some 2,000 employees after a railway strike ground passenger train service to a halt, a spokeswoman said.
The employees received notice Friday after 340 locomotive engineers and yardmasters went on strike, Via Rail spokeswoman Claude Arsenault told AFP.
"If the conflict is not resolved, on Wednesday, we will close 16 stations that are still open" and all 2,400 Via Rail employees would then be temporarily without a job, she added.
The workers, including those who maintain the trains or those who work in call centres, are represented by the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) union, and not Teamsters Canada, which represents railway workers.
Negotiations between Teamsters Canada, representing 340 locomotive engineers, and the railway company have been ongoing for two and a half years, in hopes of reaching a collective agreement, and wage negotiations failed Friday.
The two conflicting parties were seeking Saturday to "find a potential solution" with the help of a mediator named by the Canadian government, Arsenault said.
The strike has paralysed almost all Canadian passenger trains, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
Some 12,000 people use Via Rail services each day.
Train service linking the financial capital Toronto in the east and the western city of Vancouver had already been suspended earlier in the week, in order to prevent passengers travelling along the 4,500-kilometre (2,796-mile) route from being left stranded indefinitely.
The strike does not affect freight trains, which are run by other companies.
Posted: 26 July 2009 1030 hrs
Via Rail employees
MONTREAL: Canadian national carrier Via Rail on Saturday temporarily laid off some 2,000 employees after a railway strike ground passenger train service to a halt, a spokeswoman said.
The employees received notice Friday after 340 locomotive engineers and yardmasters went on strike, Via Rail spokeswoman Claude Arsenault told AFP.
"If the conflict is not resolved, on Wednesday, we will close 16 stations that are still open" and all 2,400 Via Rail employees would then be temporarily without a job, she added.
The workers, including those who maintain the trains or those who work in call centres, are represented by the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) union, and not Teamsters Canada, which represents railway workers.
Negotiations between Teamsters Canada, representing 340 locomotive engineers, and the railway company have been ongoing for two and a half years, in hopes of reaching a collective agreement, and wage negotiations failed Friday.
The two conflicting parties were seeking Saturday to "find a potential solution" with the help of a mediator named by the Canadian government, Arsenault said.
The strike has paralysed almost all Canadian passenger trains, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
Some 12,000 people use Via Rail services each day.
Train service linking the financial capital Toronto in the east and the western city of Vancouver had already been suspended earlier in the week, in order to prevent passengers travelling along the 4,500-kilometre (2,796-mile) route from being left stranded indefinitely.
The strike does not affect freight trains, which are run by other companies.