‘We don’t want to be here’: Sask. CPKC workers frustrated by rail lockout
Just hours after Canadian Pacific Kansas City locked them out of their workplaces, many rail workers were out on the picket lines early on Thursday morning in Saskatoon, pleading for the union and company to get a deal done.
After months of difficult negotiations, Canadian National Railway Co. and Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. locked out 9,300 engineers, conductors and yard workers after the parties disagreed on a new contract before the midnight deadline.
The lockout means big issues for freight traffic on Canada’s two largest railways, and Saskatchewan’s provincial government has previously called on Ottawa to intervene, in order to avoid the potential for major damage to the provincial economy.
“We don’t want to be here,” said Trevor Sanders, the president of Teamsters Local 793, the union representing the rail workers in the city.