Montreal Port Workers Set to Strike Over Wage Dispute

Three-Day Strike to Shut Down Two Major Terminals Starting Sept. 30
Port of Montreal
The Montreal Port, Canada’s second-largest container port, has four terminals. (Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg News)

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Two major terminals at Montreal Port operated by Terminal Termont Inc. will close next week as unionized dockworkers prepare for a three-day strike starting Sept. 30.

“Operations, including service to truckers, will resume on [Oct. 3],” the container terminal operator said Friday in a statement on its website.

The 1,200 dockworkers, represented by the Port of Montreal Longshoremen’s Union, have been without a collective agreement since Dec. 31, and talks are nearing an impasse over wages and work-life balance. The union gave 72-hour strike notice on Sept. 27 to the Maritime Employers Association.



Montreal Port Authority has activated a business continuity plan to ensure the actions don’t affect the rest of the port operations, according to a statement published Sept. 27 on its website.

“Although negotiations are continuing, we are disappointed that they have not, to date, enabled both parties to reach an agreement, while nearly C$6 billion ($4.4 billion) worth of goods are expected to arrive on the Port of Montreal’s docks in the coming weeks,” CEO Julie Gascon said in the statement.

The Montreal Port, Canada’s second-largest container port, has four terminals. Two terminals operated by Montreal Gateway Terminals Partnership won’t be impacted by the work stoppage.

The labor action in Montreal comes amid the threat of a strike starting Oct. 1 at major U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast ports, and after grain workers at Vancouver Port, Canada’s biggest port, went on strike Sept. 24.

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