Metro Vancouver union ramps up job action with full strike planned for Monday

People begin the Grouse Grind on Feb. 4.

The union representing Metro Vancouver outside workers said it plans to escalate its three-week job action to a full-scale strike on Monday.

The Greater Vancouver Regional District Employees’ Union said all non-essential workers will walk off the job Monday and rally outside Metro’s Burnaby headquarters in a bid to get a new contract.

Union president Jesse Medeiros said the full-scale strike will be noticed by the public as workers will not be present at popular regional parks like Grouse Mountain, Derby Reach and Deas Island.

Workers will also walk off the job at watersheds, wastewater treatment plants, operations yards, construction sites and other facilities.

“Our members are angry and frustrated that after 17 months without a contract, Metro Vancouver management continue to ignore the concerns of the front-line workers who deliver important services across the region,” said Medeiros in a statement issued Friday.

Starting Friday and continuing through the weekend, workers at regional parks will work only between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m., said the union.

The escalation comes days after picket lines went up temporarily at the Grouse Grind and Vancouver’s Queen Elizabeth Park, where the Metro-operated Little Mountain pump station and reservoir are located.

Medeiros said the union regrets the impact on the public but its members can no longer afford to wait indefinitely for a new collective agreement.

The union represents about 600 Metro workers, along with 150 contract workers, who operate and maintain regional services including water, sewer, infrastructure and parks.

Sticking points between the union and Metro management include worker safety, contracting out of bargaining-unit work, and recruitment and retention.

chchan@postmedia.com

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