Bid to freeze Manitoba Hydro wages backfired, costing $14M, NDP says - Action News
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Manitoba

Bid to freeze Manitoba Hydro wages backfired, costing $14M, NDP says

The labour dispute stemming from theprovince's failedattempt to freeze the wages of some Manitoba Hydro workers cost the power company just over $14million.

Premier Kelvin Goertzen says the expense is nothing compared to NDP waste with power utility

Men in Hydro work equipment hold a banner, representing their logo.
Members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 2034 demonstrate outside the Manitoba Legislature in April 2021, where they argued the Progressive Conservative government was interfering in the bargaining process with Manitoba Hydro. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

The labour dispute stemming from the province's failedattempt to freeze the wages of some Manitoba Hydro workers cost the power company millions of dollars, according to a document obtained by the Opposition NDP.

Thedocument, obtained through a freedom of information request,pegs the cost oflast spring's two-month strike with 2,300 front-line workers atjust over $14million, including expenses like paying workers to replace those on strike.

NDP Leader Wab Kinewsaid the government's demand of two-year wage freezes for publicly owned corporations forced the labour action, involving workers represented by theInternational Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW)Local 2034.

But their wages increased anyway, against the government's directive.

The union applied to the labour boardto end the contract dispute. The boardgranted modest wage increases to the Hydro workers.

"Why did we go to a strike in the first place?" Kinew askedafter question period on Friday.

It seems like that $14.3 million was "just a waste and was just a result of [former premier Brian Pallister] and the PCs' drive to always try and treat workers poorly, even though these are hard-working Manitobans who support families and communities," Kinew said.

IBEWLocal 2034 workers went on rotating strikes in March, following 28 months of unsuccessful negotiations.

The union said the province's mandate for stagnant wages amounted to government interference, but the Progressive Conservative government maintained it had aresponsibility to set bargaining guidelines.

Premier Kelvin Goertzensaid Friday that "labour actionshappen. There are costs that come withlabour actions."

"It is not in scale with the billions of dollars that were spent at Hydro by putting a hydro line on the wrong side of the province, against the advice of experts and Manitoba Hydro," Goertzen said, alluding to the decision by the former NDP governmentto run the Bipole III transmission line down the west side of Lake Winnipeg.

In 2016, the then chair ofManitoba Hydro'sboard called thata billion-dollar mistake.