'You could hear a pin drop': Contract vote derailed in Prince Albert after surprise disclosure from city
Inside workers in Prince Albert have delayed a vote on a tentative contract after the city disclosed surprise plans for “sweeping” structural changes to its workforce.
Employees with CUPE 882 were set to vote on a tentative agreement on Friday, after nearly three weeks on the picket line.
According to a spokesperson for CUPE, the city told the negotiating team on Friday it was planning to make significant changes to the job location and duties of a number of positions, including moving some clerks into a call centre established at the start of the strike.
The changes could potentially force some workers to be reclassified, accept layoffs, or to bump junior colleagues from their positions, CUPE says.
After seeing progress in the last week and a tentative deal struck on Tuesday, CUPE said they felt blindsided by the move.
“The fact that the employer was sitting there withholding information damages the relationship … It is quite devastating for the employees,” said CUPE national spokesperson Mira Lewis.
“When we announced to the membership what had happened you could hear a pin drop.”
She says the city is required to negotiate such significant changes to the terms of employment with its staff, through a joint job evaluation committee.
“There are requirements under the Trade Union Act which the employer is blatantly ignoring,” said Lewis.
“They're putting more effort into minimizing the interests of the union than they are into maintaining a relationship or repairing a relationship that at this point is so broken that I feel like the road to recovery will be long.”
Employees with CUPE 882 have been without a contract since December 2021. In June, the union voted in favour of job action up to and including a full withdrawal of services. Prior to the strike, workers were under a work-to-rule order since Aug. 10.
The strike affects a number of city-run facilities including City Hall, the Art Hauser Centre and the EA Rawlinson Centre for the Arts.
Lewis says strikes are part of the union environment, but it’s not common for an employer to “draw these kinds of battle lines against their own employees.”
Many of the workers on the picket line have been with the city for decades, she says.
“These are people who have dedicated their lives to the service of the City of Prince Albert. These are people that have been proud to work for the City of Prince Albert and the employer has demeaned all of that.”
Lewis said she hopes the city comes back to the bargaining table to negotiate its proposed changes with the workers affected by them.
In the meantime, it looks like Prince Albert’s inside workers are heading back outside to the picket line.
“We will be picketing until a deal is ratified,” Lewis said.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

BREAKING Claims of toxic workplace at CSIS absolutely 'devastating': PM says
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says allegations of a toxic workplace culture, involving harassment and sexual assault at Canada's spy agency are 'devastating' and 'absolutely unacceptable.'
TREND LINE Liberals and NDP tied in ballot support, Conservatives 19 points ahead: Nanos
The governing minority Liberals' decline in the polls has now placed them in a tie for support with their confidence-and-supply partners the NDP, while the Conservatives are now 19 points ahead, according Nanos' latest ballot tracking.
Sask. premier says province will stop collecting carbon levy on electric heat
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says the province intends to stop collecting the carbon levy on electric heat.
Here's when Canada Post says you should send out your holiday packages
Canada Post had released a holiday guide on when Canadians should mail out their packages.
What to know about the Sikh independence movement following U.S. accusation that activist was targeted
The U.S. has charged an Indian national in what prosecutors allege was a failed plot to assassinate a Sikh separatist at the behest of an unnamed Indian government official.
Filmmakers in Bruce Peninsula 'accidentally' discover 128-year-old shipwreck
Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick were looking for invasive mussels when they found something no has laid on eyes for 128 years.
Chinstrap penguins nod off more than 10,000 times per day in seconds-long 'microsleeps,' study finds
A new study has documented the peculiar sleeping habits of this species of penguin. Instead of taking one long continuous period of sleep, chinstrap penguins prefer to sleep in seconds-long intervals, more than 10,000 times a day.
Alternative healer faces manslaughter charge over woman's death at a U.K. slapping therapy workshop
An alternative healer who advocates a technique known as 'slapping therapy' was charged Thursday over the death of a woman at one of his workshops in England seven years ago.
Brazilian city enacts an ordinance secretly written by a surprising new staffer: ChatGPT
City lawmakers in Brazil have enacted what appears to be the nation's first legislation written entirely by artificial intelligence -- even if they didn't know it at the time.