Viterra workers suspend strike to vote on new offer
Workers will be working to rule during the voting period
| 2 min read
By Karen Briere

(Dave Bedard photo)
The voting period lasts until Jan. 19. Viterra said it will monitor the union’s actions leading up to the vote and would “strongly consider” a lockout if union action disrupts business.
The GSU gave 72-hour strike notice Jan. 2 after members rejected the then-final offer. Negotiations continued for the next two days with the help of a federally-appointed mediator and the most recent offer was tabled late Jan. 4.
The legal strike is not being called off, according to documents on the GSU website, but members will work to rule until the results are in.
A strike would have a “huge impact” on farmers’ cash flow, particularly those with contracts to sell crops to Viterra, said Ian Boxall, president of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan.
Boxall said Viterra represents 27 per cent of Saskatchewan’s capacity at country elevators, the facilities that buy crops from farmers and transport them to processors and millers.
A strike would also back up grain transportation to British Columbia ports, which export much of Canada’s harvest, Boxall said. Canada is the world’s biggest exporter of canola and fourth-largest wheat exporter.
–Updated Jan. 5 to add comments from Ian Boxall.