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Unionized workers rejecting more deals as fight for wage gains presses on

Workers strike outside Toronto's Nestlé plant after walking off the job Sunday, May 5, 2024. (Cole Burston / The Canadian Press) Workers strike outside Toronto's Nestlé plant after walking off the job Sunday, May 5, 2024. (Cole Burston / The Canadian Press)
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Experts say union workers are feeling increasingly emboldened to reject tentative agreements as they fight to join the ranks of those benefiting from the recent wave of wage gains.

McGill University associate professor Barry Eidlin says there’s a clear uptick in workers rejecting deals that have been recommended by their bargaining committees.

He says workers are galvanized by inflation, the pandemic and a decades-long trend of employers having the upper hand.

Over the weekend, workers at a Nestlé chocolate plant in Toronto went on strike after turning down a tentative deal with the chocolate maker.

Eamonn Clarke, president of the Unifor local representing them, says workers’ expectations are much higher now because the cost of living has risen so much.

He says he’s seeing more tentative deals being rejected, or barely passing.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 7, 2024.

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