HomeMain NewsMetro workers accept tentative agreement and ends month-long labour dispute

Metro workers accept tentative agreement and ends month-long labour dispute

Metro workers accept tentative agreement and ends month-long labour dispute

Grocery workers on strike from more than two dozen Metro Inc. supermarkets in the Toronto area have accepted a tentative agreement that ends a month-long labour dispute that shut down stores and temporarily blocked deliveries of meat and produce around the province.

The new deal offered an extra 75 cents per hour to full-timers, and 55 cents to part-timers, compared to Metro’s previous offer, though the wage increases are now stretched over five years instead of four. Workers ratified the deal in a vote at a Toronto convention centre on Aug. 31, said Paul Whyte, a spokesperson with Unifor, the union representing the workers.

Negotiators didn’t go back to the bargaining table for over a month afterward. Workers picketed Metro stores and in late August, Unifor organized a blockade of two Metro warehouses that specialized in perishable food. Metro said the workers had gone too far, as they shut down deliveries to stores around Ontario and threatened to spoil truckloads of meat, seafood, produce and dairy.

At the time, Payne said Metro’s workers had created a “movement” in Canada in pushing back against corporate greed.

An Ontario Superior Court judge, however, ordered an end to the blockade earlier this week, though the ruling still allowed Unifor to continue holding up trucks at the warehouses for five minutes at a time. But within hours of the decision going public, the union announced it would end picketing at the warehouses as a “gesture of good faith” as it returned to the bargaining table. The next day, both sides announced they’d come to terms on a new tentative agreement.

In a statement, Metro said the deal was “fair and equitable for our employees and our customers.”

 

The new deal gives full-timers and senior part-timers a total of $4.50 per hour in wage increases over five years, compared to $3.75 per hour in pay hikes over four years in the previous deal. Part-timers will get a total pay hike of $3.20 per hour over five years, compared to $2.65 over four years in the previous offer.
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‘It’s not enough’

In a handout at the convention centre, the union highlighted that members will get more money upfront in the current offer.

Throughout the strike, union leaders said they wouldn’t go back to their members with another deal unless Metro offered an immediate raise of $2 per hour. Local president Gord Currie said members wanted to bring back the $2 hourly bonus that Metro paid to frontline employees during the pandemic — the so-called “Hero Pay.” Metro and its two main rivals in the grocery business simultaneously cancelled that bonus in June 2020, sparking a national scandal that pushed Ottawa to strengthen federal laws against wage fixing.

Workers will get the extra $2 per hour as part of the new deal, but not right away. The agreement includes an immediate raise of $1.50 for full-timers with an additional 50 cents in January 2024, compared to an immediate raise of $1.25 in the July offer. Part-timers get a $1.50 raise upfront, but won’t get another raise in January.

The deal also improves pension benefits, boosts optical benefits by $75 to a max of $275 every two years and increases paramedical benefits by $25. Part-time workers who have been with the company for more than five years will now receive between eight and 24 hours of paid sick leave annually, depending on their years of service, according to a union handout.
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“For us working people, it’s not enough,” said Keith McQuarrie, a part-timer in the seafood department at a Newmarket store. “The union sold us out.”

But Tyler Mitchell, a part-timer who is working at a Toronto store for the summer to save for school in the fall, said he didn’t think dragging out the strike even longer was going to work.

“I think it’s the best deal we’re going to get,” he said. “We deserve more, but that’s how it’s going to be.”

Allison Glaser, a part-time cashier in north Toronto who supports an aging mother and a brother with special needs, said it would have been easier to support the deal if part-timers were also offered $2.

“This was supposed to be our movement,” she said. “We may have wasted five weeks for nothing.”

 

This article was reported by Financial Post