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Canada Post, union set to meet on Sunday as overtime ban stretches on

OTTAWA — Canada Post was set to meet with negotiators from its union Sunday amid warnings of mail delivery delays tied to a national ban on overtime for postal workers.
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People walk past the Canada Post facility in Mississauga, Ont., on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Canada Post is set to meet with the postal workers' union on Sunday, May 25, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

OTTAWA — Canada Post was set to meet with negotiators from its union Sunday amid warnings of mail delivery delays tied to a national ban on overtime for postal workers.

Sunday's meeting will be the first of the weekend, a spokesperson for the Crown corporation said.

A mediator will be on hand to work with the parties who have been deadlocked for months in efforts to secure a new collective bargaining agreement.

Canada Post presented its latest offers to the union on Wednesday, which included a hike in pay and plans to roll out a fleet of part-time workers.

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers has yet to offer a formal response to the proposals, but its request for a two-week "truce" to consider the deal was rejected by the employer.

On Sunday, the union said its negotiators had "worked hard to carefully evaluate the offers and prepare responses" ahead of the day's meeting with the employer and the mediators.

In an email, CUPW criticized Canada Post for rejecting its truce proposal, which it said left negotiators with only a few days to comb through the legal wording of the 700-page offer.

“If instability hangs over these negotiations, it’s due to Canada Post’s uncompromising stance and time management," the union wrote in a statement.

The most recent agreement between the parties, which was extended by the industrial relations board after Ottawa intervened in the month-long holiday season strike late last year, expired Thursday.

While CUPW issued a 72-hour strike notice earlier in the week that could have seen workers walk off the job first thing on Friday morning, the union instead issued a national ban on taking overtime work while it considered the latest deal.

The union said in a bulletin to members last week that the offers "fall short" on wages and other key sticking points in the negotiations.

Canada Post said the most recent offers reflect its financial realities.

An Industrial Inquiry Commission set up by the federal government found the postal service was effectively "bankrupt" and recommended a series of structural changes in a report released earlier this month.

That included recommendations to phase out daily door-to-door delivery and implement a "dynamic routing" system that could see mail carriers' routes change on a daily basis.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 25, 2025.

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press

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