Crop insurance union reacts to Premier’s 24 hour ultimatum
Saskatchewan's Premier is looking to force an end to the Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation (SCIC) strike that only just began on Tuesday.
The Saskatchewan Government Employees Union (SGEU) walked away from the bargaining table, sending nearly 500 SCIC employees off the job and onto picket lines. They've been without a contract since September of 2009 and the two sides are disagreeing over not only wages but also compensation for employees who use personal vehicles for company tasks.
Now Brad Wall is giving the union an ultimatum instead of another offer. In a letter addressed and sent to SGEU president Bob Bymoen Wednesday morning, he's demanding Bymoen commit to ending the strike within 24 hours or else the government will “take action.” Wall says striking at a time when more than 5 million acres of farm land is going unseeded this year, due mostly to a one in 500 year flood, is “deplorable” and “appalling.”
“People right now that are volunteering to save property and to help communities who are literally quite helpless in the face of unprecedented flooding aren't doing it waiting for some sort of compensation,” he told reporters during an intense interview at the Legislature Wednesday morning. “They're doing it because it's the right thing to do and that's what we need the union leadership to do.”