11 hours ago
Canada Post reaches deal with rural union after 18-month standoff as talks stall with 55,000 CUPW workers
After 18 months of tense negotiations,
Canada Post
has reached an agreement with its second-largest union, which represents roughly 8,500 members, bringing much-needed relief to rural postmasters and assistants across the country.
Yet the larger and more fraught negotiations continue with the
Canadian Union of Postal Workers
(
CUPW
), which represents 55,000 urban and rural mail carriers.
The latest contract
by Taboola
by Taboola
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The freshly inked contract with the Canadian Postmasters and Assistants Association (CPAA) runs from January 1, 2024, to Dec 31, 2026. It guarantees an 11 percent
wage increase
over three years, divided as 6 percent in the first year, 3 percent in 2025, and 2 percent in 2026, with full retroactive application to January 2024.
CPAA members, representing 8500 members and largely based in rural communities, say the raise recognizes the unique challenges they face, including isolation, limited resources, and underused offices that remain vital lifelines in their towns.
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'This means I can think about repairs or extending hours without fretting about finances,' says rural postmaster Rachel Dalton, who oversees a post office in northern Ontario. 'It may not sound glamorous, but for our community, it matters.'
Canada Post credits progress to intervention from a federal arbitrator, which centered on a stern Industrial Inquiry Commission report outlining the corporation's
financial pressures
. Still, that same report also guided discussions with CUPW. Canada Post formally requested last month that CUPW members vote on its final offer under Section 108.1 of the Canada Labour Code.
Tensions remain high. CUPW has imposed an
overtime ban
since May 23, citing stalled talks as their reason. Urban mail carriers report mounting stress: slower deliveries, weekend backlogs, and surging public frustration.
Canada Post reports losses of over $1 billion since 2018, including $4.9 billion in
labor costs
vs $6.9 billion in revenue in 2023. With parcel delivery costs topping benchmarks, the corporation insists it can't afford unsustainable wage hikes.