In defying the back-to-work order, CUPE took a calculated risk that paid off
On Tuesday, Air Canada and 10,500 flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) reached a tentative deal that the union said would give its members some of the best provisions amongst North American airlines because Air Canada was forced to 'significantly' increase its offer.
This came on the heels of a 24-hour illegal strike, after CUPE's national leadership made the call to disregard a back-to-work order imposed by the federal labour board.
'This was a historic moment and it may have a ripple effect across the labour movement,' said Charles Smith, a professor of political science at the University of Saskatchewan. 'The membership was united, public support for flight attendants was strong, so CUPE made the calculation that they could defy the order and continue striking until they got a better deal for their flight attendants.'
The union struck a four-year deal with Air Canada, which must be approved by a majority of union members in coming votes. It provides hourly raises of about 16 to 20 per cent over the life of the contract, depending on seniority and job type, according to people familiar with the matter. The Globe is not identifying them because they were not authorized to speak about the deal.
Flight attendants will also be paid a share of their hourly wage for pre- and post-flight work, which was previously unpaid and a key issue for union members. The ground work pay starts at 50 per cent of the hourly rate in the first year and rises to 70 per cent by the fourth.
Air Canada and CUPE officials declined to comment.
The issue of unpaid work was central in the labour dispute. As it stands, flight attendants are compensated an hourly rate from the time the airplane takes off to the point where it lands, but are not paid during boarding, safety checks and deplaning.
CUPE had the upper hand in this round of negotiations, said Adam King, an assistant professor of labour studies at the University of Manitoba. 'They had a smart communications strategy that really emphasized to the public that flight attendants were actually not getting paid for a significant amount of time on the job. The time was right to challenge Air Canada and the federal labour board.'
A public survey conducted by the polling firm Abacus Data on Aug. 18 – two days into the strike, and after the government had ordered flight attendants back to their jobs – found that 66 per cent of respondents sided with the flight attendants. Sixty-two per cent of people felt that Ottawa's back-to-work order set a bad precedent, and 54 per cent said flight attendants were right to defy the order.
The margin of error for the survey is plus-or-minus 2.7 per cent.
'There was a unique convergence of factors that made it possible for CUPE to take the risk of continuing on with an unlawful strike: public support against a private sector employer, a strike of front-line workers whom the public interacted with regularly, and the fact that the flight attendants were emerging from a 10-year contract,' said Stephanie Ross, an associate professor of labour studies at McMaster University.
Prof. Ross said she believes that union members want their union leadership to take risks to get better deals, and the outcome of this strike could be communicating that to other leaders. On Monday, CUPE national president Mark Hancock told reporters at a press conference that he was willing to risk jail time and have the union pay a hefty fine to get a better deal for members.
Opinion: Air Canada, the airline oligopoly and the abused consumer
Air Canada strike puts Ottawa's favourite tool for quashing labour unrest in crosshairs
CUPE's defiance of the Canada Industrial Relations Board's back-to-work order – which it was directed to make after the federal government invoked a clause in the Canada Labour Code – gained support from other major unions including Unifor, United Food and Commercial Workers union, and the Public Services Alliance of Canada. The Canada Labour Congress, an umbrella organization representing dozens of national unions, said it would collect financial contributions from affiliates to assist with legal costs.
Labour experts have long been critical of the government's use of Section 107 – a clause that was rarely invoked prior to 2022, and which allows the government to order the federal labour board to direct striking workers back to their jobs and impose binding arbitration to force a deal. They say Ottawa's constant interventions undermine collective bargaining because it creates a loophole that works in favour of employers and prevents them from proposing the best deal possible. The government has used Section 107 six times in the past two years to send striking workers back to their jobs.
Prof. King said its repeated use gave CUPE more ground to challenge the order.
He also said the optics of enforcing the back-to-work order played in CUPE's favour. 'Was this Liberal government really going to enforce fines on a majority female work force, and send a prominent union leader to jail?'
In a recent interview with BNN Bloomberg, Air Canada chief executive officer Michael Rousseau said the airline did not anticipate a long work stoppage because the airline had assumed Section 107 would be invoked by the government.
'The use of Section 107 kind of became an existential crisis for labour in Canada,' said Barry Eidlin, an associate professor in the sociology department at McGill University. 'If unions keep allowing this to stand – where the government can just send an e-mail to the CIRB and end a strike – there's really no more right to strike in this country.'
Prof. Eidlin said he believed it would be hard for Ottawa to use the clause in future disputes. 'This got the ball rolling to get rid of this practice,' he said.
With a report from Eric Atkins
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

National Post
22 minutes ago
- National Post
Harvest Announces Launch Date of Canadian Harvest High Income Shares ETFs
Article content OAKVILLE, Ontario — Harvest Portfolios Group Inc. ('Harvest' 'Harvest ETFs') is pleased to announce that it has received the final prospectus notice from the securities regulators for the new suite of Canadian Harvest High Income Shares ETFs on August 19, 2025 and are expected to commence trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange ('TSX') on Thursday August 21, 2025 under the following ticker symbols outlined in the table below. Article content Article content As Canada's largest and leading single-stock ETF issuer, Harvest ETFs is expanding its product line-up with the new Canadian High Income Shares ETFs, which builds on the success of the High Income Shares TM suite. Designed to deliver high monthly income by investing in some of Canada's most recognizable companies, each ETF will hold a leading Canadian blue-chip company, offering exposure to sector growth potential while using modest leverage and an active covered call strategy to generate high monthly income for investors. Article content 'On the back of strong demand from Canadians who have looked for ways to invest in the Canadian story, we're incredibly excited to be able to empower investors to take advantage of local-led growth with high monthly income through this Canadian expansion of our High Income Shares TM suite of single-stock ETFs', said Michael Kovacs, President and CEO of Harvest ETFs, 'The 10 new ETFs include widely held market leaders that represent the growth engine of Canadian commerce, and through our underlying covered call option strategies, can deliver high levels of tax-efficient, monthly income for investors. In addition, similar to the category-leading Harvest Diversified High Income Shares ETF (TSX: HHIS), we are launching a new diversified High Income Shares TM one-ticket solution, the Harvest Canadian High Income Shares ETF (TSX: HHIC), initially focused on the 10 underlying Canadian Single Stock Securities.' Article content Website: Article content Article content Article content E-mail: Article content Article content Article content Toll free: 1-866-998-8298 Article content Follow Us on Social Media: Article content LinkedIn: Article content Article content Twitter: Article content Article content Article content Facebook: Article content Article content You will usually pay brokerage fees to your dealer if you purchase or sell shares/units of the investment fund on the TSX. If the shares/units are purchased or sold on the TSX, investors may pay more than the current net asset value when buying shares/units of the investment fund and may receive less than the current net asset value when selling them. There are ongoing fees and expenses associated with owning shares/units of an investment fund. Investment funds are not guaranteed, their values change frequently and past performance may not be repeated. An investment fund must prepare disclosure documents that contain key information about the investment fund. You can find more detailed information about the investment fund in these documents. Distributions are paid to you in cash unless you request, pursuant to your participation in a distribution reinvestment plan, that they be reinvested into shares or units of the Fund. If the Fund earns less than the amounts distributed, the difference is a return of capital. Tax, investment and all other decisions should be made with guidance from a qualified professional. Article content Article content Article content Article content Article content Contacts Article content For Additional Information: Article content Article content Website: Article content Article content Article content E-mail: Article content Article content Article content


National Post
22 minutes ago
- National Post
Kasisto Launches KAIgentic, The Banking Standard in Agentic AI
NEW YORK — Kasisto, the market leader for AI in banking, has announced the launch of KAIgentic, an agentic AI platform purpose built for banking and now available to banks and credit unions. KAIgentic delivers AI that thinks like a bank's best banker, combining intelligence, compliance, and bank grade performance in one platform across customer experience, employee experience, and AI operations. Article content Article content As many banks and credit unions continue to test generic large language models and unproven agent frameworks, KAIgentic delivers what the industry needs: secure, auditable, domain specific AI agents deeply embedded within the systems that power banking. Article content 'Trust is the currency of banking, and most AI cannot be trusted,' said Lance Berks, CEO of Kasisto. 'KAIgentic changes that. It is not a prototype or a pilot. It is production ready, compliant by design, and built to operate inside the real-world systems banks rely on every day.' Article content The platform orchestrates autonomous AI agents capable of delivering intelligent, personalized, and proactive experiences across voice and digital channels, all while meeting strict regulatory and risk management requirements. Article content Key capabilities include: Article content End to end compliance architecture: Integrated controls for fraud detection, audit logging, policy enforcement, and regulatory reporting. Pre-processing with institutional intelligence: Dynamically conditions agent behavior with custom SOPs, compliance documents, and user defined prompts. Agentic post processing layer: Hallucination detection, confidence scoring, and wrap around agents for compliance, security, fraud, regulations, and QA. Enterprise grade insights engine: Uncovers emerging trends, customer friction points, and LLM behavior anomalies through deep analytics. Agent augmented workforce: An AI powered Agent Console supports human agents with summaries, recommendations, and compliance context. LLM deployment flexibility: Choose between trusted open models or deploy KaiGPT, a domain tuned LLM that runs securely within the bank's cloud or on premises environment. Article content 'Our vision is that every customer with a bank account will have a personal agent guiding their financial journey,' said Joshua Schechter, Chief Product and Innovation Officer at Kasisto. 'KAIgentic makes that vision real, giving institutions the ability to earn trust, deepen relationships, and help customers build long term financial stability.' Article content Availability and early access Article content KAIgentic is in early access with select banks and credit unions, supporting customer interactions, employee workflows, and contact center experiences. Broader availability is expected later this year across North America, Europe, and Asia. Article content Financial institutions can request a personalized demonstration or learn more at or by emailing info@ About Kasisto Kasisto is the market leader in agentic AI platforms purpose built for the banking industry. Trusted by financial institutions worldwide, Kasisto delivers intelligent, compliant, and auditable AI experiences that transform how banks operate. Its platform orchestrates autonomous AI agents that work securely within the regulatory and operational frameworks of banking. At its core is KaiGPT, a proprietary large language model tuned for banking, enabling domain specific accuracy, zero risk reliability, and flexible deployment. With deep industry expertise and agentic architecture, Kasisto empowers banks to lead in the era of intelligent, trusted AI. Article content Article content Article content Article content


Globe and Mail
22 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Cunard Sets Sail for Labor Day with Fares from $999 Plus, Onboard Credit on Over 145 Voyages
VALENCIA, Calif. , Aug. 20, 2025 /CNW/ -- Luxury cruise line Cunard has announced its Labor Day Sale starting tomorrow, offering fares from $999 plus up to $200 onboard credit on more than 145 voyages sailing between 2025 and 2027. From August 21 through September 3, 2025 , travelers have the perfect opportunity to plan their next journey aboard Cunard's iconic fleet, all at an excellent value. The Labor Day Sale features a diverse collection of itineraries, including: 2025 Caribbean , Northern Europe and Transatlantic Crossing voyages 2026 Alaska , Canada New England, Mediterranean, Panama Canal, Caribbean , Northern Europe , Transatlantic Crossing and World Voyage Segments 2027 Caribbean , Transatlantic Crossing, and World Voyage Segments. Iconic Ships & Voyages Sailings are available on all four of Cunard's Queens — the world's only ocean liner, Queen Mary 2 , the newly refreshed Queen Elizabeth, the iconic Queen Victoria, and the line's newest ship, Queen Anne. Whether embarking on an unforgettable World Voyage, witnessing Queen Mary 2's historic maiden Panama Canal transit, or enjoying a sun-filled Caribbean escape aboard Queen Elizabeth , guests will experience the ultimate vacation at sea – with Cunard's signature White Star Service, world-class dining, enriching onboard programs and idyllic destinations. Highlight voyages include: World Voyages: A once-in-a-lifetime journey visiting some of the globe's most iconic ports. In 2026 and 2027, guests can embark on the full World Voyage or choose from a selection of shorter World Voyage segments, with itineraries spanning multiple continents. Queen Anne , Queen Mary 2, and Queen Victoria will each sail world cruises during this period, with voyages ranging from 108 to 117 nights – all with Cunard's signature elegance and White Star Service. Queen Mary 2: Maiden Panama Canal Transit : Cunard's flagship Queen Mary 2 will set sail from New York to Los Angeles on a 15-night voyage, from January 19 to February 3, 2025 , marking her first-ever transit through the Panama Canal. This historic journey allows guests to blend transcontinental travel with the iconic elegance of the world's only ocean liner. Winter in the Caribbean on Queen Elizabeth: The newly transformed Queen Elizabeth will sail from Miami to the Caribbean for the first time starting this October. Guests will explore the region's acclaimed crystal-clear waters and pristine beaches, with nine to 28-night voyages stopping at unique destinations including St. Thomas , Bridgetown , Bonaire , Aruba , Tortola and Barbados. For more information about Cunard, the Summer Savings Event or to book a voyage, contact your Travel Advisor, call Cunard at 1-800-728-6273 or visit For Travel Advisors interested in further information, please contact your Business Development Manager, visit or call Cunard at 1-800-528-6273. About Cunard Cunard is a luxury British cruise line, renowned for creating unforgettable experiences around the world. Cunard has been a leading operator of passenger ships since 1840, and this year celebrates an incredible 185 years of operation. 2025 is a momentous year in Cunard's history, which will be marked with several iconic land-based events and special Event Voyages. The Cunard experience is built on fine dining, hand-selected entertainment, and outstanding White Star service. From a partnership with a two-Michelin starred chef, to inspiring guest speakers, to world class theatre productions, every detail has been meticulously crafted to make the experience unforgettable. A pioneer in transatlantic journeys and round world voyages, destinations sailed to also include Europe , the Caribbean , Alaska , the Far East and Australia . There are currently four Cunard ships, Queen Mary 2, Queen Elizabeth , Queen Victoria and new ship, Queen Anne , which entered service in May 2024 . This investment is part of the company's ambitious plans for the future of Cunard globally, with the brand now boasting four ships in simultaneous service for the first time since 1999. Cunard is based at Carnival House in Southampton and has been owned since 1998 by Carnival Corporation & plc. (NYSE/LSE: CCL; NYSE:CUK). Please note, once directed to the page you will need to "Register for an account." Your request may take up to 24 hours for approval to access the library of assets. You will be notified via email to complete your registration. For additional information about Cunard, contact: Cunard: cunardpublicrelations@