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Canadian postal workers will resume mail delivery Saturday and begin rotating strikes

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPSW) will resume mail deliveries on Saturday, rotating which workers are on strike. A labor dispute has caused mail services to be halted nationwide for two weeks.

CUPW stated that the rotating strikes will begin at 6 am in each time zone. This will allow parcels and mail to be moved again, while continuing to pressure Canada Post, which is a government-owned corporation, to come to a fair collective contract.

On September 25, more than 55,000 post workers left their jobs after Public Works and Procurement minister Joel Lightbound announced a restructuring of Canada Post, which the union believes will result in job loss. The announcement was made during a round of long-term negotiations that began late in 2023, and were interrupted last year by a strike by postal workers.

In a late-night statement, Jan Simpson, CUPW national president, said, "We didn't take this decision lightly." "Postal workers prefer to have new collective agreements, and deliver mail than take strike action."

Canada Post has not responded to our request for comment immediately.

Postal service struggles as letter volume drops and private sector competition increases for parcel shipping.

Mark Carney, the Prime Minister of Canada, said last week that Canada Post is in a tough financial situation. He stated that the corporation was losing million of dollars, and stressed the necessity for restructuring.

CUPW rejected Canada Post’s latest offer, and said that the government’s intervention had worsened this dispute.

(source: Reuters)