After increasing strike activity to five locations across Canada, CN Rail have locked out all participating employees.
CBC.ca reported that the dispute flared up again after union members rejected a tentative deal struck in February to end a 15-day walkout.
United Transportation Union workers in Ontario, British Columbia and Nova Scotia began rotating strikes late Tuesday to force Canada's largest rail carrier to return to the bargaining table.
But CN said it would lock out all 280 workers in locations where picketing had been taking place: Vancouver, Kamloops, B.C., and in the Ontario communities of Oakville, Brantford and Aldershot.
"CN is a scheduled railroad and we cannot run scheduled freight operations without scheduled manpower," CN spokesman Mark Hallman said.
GO Transit — the commuter train service that serves Toronto and surrounding communities, including Oakville — has so far been able to run its trains without the CN dispute causing major problems. The union must give three days notice if it plans to withdraw service from GO.
'It's not about hurting businesses'
Union representative Scott Montani told CBC News in the morning that the labour action would rotate among various Canadian cities in order to ensure freight keeps moving.
"It's not about hurting Canadian businesses. It's about getting CN back to the table. The union doesn't want to hurt anybody," Montani said, adding that the strikes would not disrupt commuter service.
Picket co-ordinator David Moorhouse said workers want to send CN the message that more money and a safer workplace are key.
"We're going to do what it takes to get CN back to the table. We don't want to disrupt the network," he said.
Hours before the lockout announcement, CN said it was prepared to return to the bargaining table, but warned it would not change the substance of its offer.
"CN is prepared to meet the union," said spokesman Mark Hallman.
"They are interested in renewing talks and at the end of the day we just need to take a look at what the parties are talking about and see if we can make progress."
Earlier walkout hurt industries
Federal Labour Minister Jean-Pierre Blackburn said the government has back-to-work legislation ready to go if it is needed.
The legislation was tabled in the House of Commons on Feb. 24, before the tentative deal was worked out to end a 15-day strike by CN's conductors and yard-service workers. That walkout crippled freight service and took a serious toll on some industries.
"A negotiated settlement is always preferable to legislation," Blackburn said in a news release.
However, back-to-work legislation might be held up because the Commons is on an Easter recess until next Monday.
Nearly 80 per cent of the United Transportation Union workers who cast ballots voted against the agreement Tuesday night. Voter turnout for the 2,800 members of the union was about 84 per cent.
The union's Canadian leadership had recommended that members endorse the one-year deal, retroactive to Jan. 1, that was to provide a three per cent wage hike and $1,000 signing bonuses.
Hallman said the company has a contingency plan. The company has said it will be using managers to keep the system running.
"We're going to provide the best level of service we can," Hallman said.
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