B.C. mayor says forestry strike left some on brink of bankruptcy as deal reached
VICTORIA — A tentative agreement in a forest industry strike that kept 3,000 workers off the job since last July is being greeted with cautious optimism by a Vancouver Island mayor who says the dispute put some families and businesses on the brink of bankruptcy.
Port McNeill Mayor Gaby Wickstrom said Monday the strike by workers represented by the United Steelworkers at Western Forest Products has been financially devastating to mill workers and businesses that rely on them.
The prospect of a settlement after almost eight months of uncertainty is positive, even though workers have yet to ratify the deal, she said.
“I’ve got phone calls from fathers in the Interior saying that they are helping their families out here and they have nothing more to give and their families are ready to lose everything,” she said in an interview. “I think for a lot of people this was a critical month, and I know for businesses it was a critical month as well.”