Transit job action enters 2nd week with union, bus company back at bargaining table - Action News
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British Columbia

Transit job action enters 2nd week with union, bus company back at bargaining table

Transit workers across Metro Vancouver are officially entering their second week of job action, bringing half a dozen more SeaBus cancellations and dips in bus service across the region.

6 SeaBus sailings cancelled; buses seeing sporadic delays; SkyTrain dispute reaches impasse

Passengers leave a TransLink bus in Vancouver on Nov. 1, 2019. Bus service is seeing sporadic delays across the region Thursday as a continued ban on maintenance workers' overtime means fewer buses on the roads. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

UPDATE:Contract talks collapse between union, Coast Mountain Bus Company


Transit workers across Metro Vancouver are officially entering their second week of job action, bringing half a dozen more SeaBus cancellations and dips in bus service across the region.

The cancelled SeaBus sailings for Thursday are as follows:

  • The 4:10 p.m., 7:32 p.m.and 8:47 p.m. sailings from Lonsdale Quay.
  • The 4:25 p.m., 7:46 p.m.and 9:01 p.m. sailings from Waterfront.

There aren't any bus routes cancelled outright Thursday, but several circuitsare seeing sporadic delays with buses coming less frequently because of workers' ban on overtime.

The ban is to blamefor days of scattered bus delays and dozens of SeaBus route cancellations between Vancouver and the North Shore since job action began Nov. 1.

Unifor, the union representing 5,000 transit workers in the region, said it went back to the bargaining table with Coast Mountain Bus Company (CMBC) for the first time in two weeks Wednesday.CMBC handles bus services on behalf ofTransLink.

The Lonsdale Quay SeaBus Terminal in North Vancouver, B.C., on Nov. 4. More than 100 SeaBus sailings have been cancelled since transit workers began their job action on Nov. 1. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Those negotiations broke off for the night late Wednesday. Talksare set to resume Thursday morning, one day before the union said disruptions would ramp up in the absence of a deal.

Bus drivers will begin refusingovertime Friday if an agreement can't be reached, according to Unifor,which could affect 10 to 15 per cent of Metro Vancouver's bus service.

Separate SkyTrain negotiations crumble

SkyTrain has been unaffected by the job action, but disruptions to the rapid-transit service are entering the realm ofpossibility after negotiations in a separatedispute with another union fell apart.

CUPE 7000, the union representing about 900 SkyTrain workers, said talkswith the TransLink-owned B.C. Rapid Transit Companycollapsed Wednesday.

The two parties were unable to reach agreement on several key issues, including wages, staffing levels and forced overtime.

So far, CUPE 7000president Tony Rebelo said there is still no impact onSkyTrain service but bargaining will need to resume to avoid service interruptions.

With files from Joel Ballard and Eva Uguen-Csenge