Unifor criticizes police presence and threats of arrest at picket line in Mount Pearl - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 01:44 AM | Calgary | -7.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Unifor criticizes police presence and threats of arrest at picket line in Mount Pearl

Roughly 20 Royal Newfoundland Constabulary officers "threatened" to arrest Dominion strikers at Weston Foods in Donovans Business Parkon Tuesday night if they didn't move from the picket line, according to a union representative.

'There's no injunction,' says union representative

Striking Dominion workers say police had no business showing up at a picket line at Weston Foods on Tuesday night. (Mike Moore/CBC)

Roughly 20 Royal Newfoundland Constabulary officers threatened Tuesday nightto arrest Dominion strikers at Weston Foods in Donovans Business Parkif they didn't move from the picket line, according to a union representative.

Dominion workers vacated their secondary picket line at theLoblaw Companies Limited distribution centre in Mount Pearl overnight Sundayand were hit with an injunction Monday morning preventing them from picketing outside.

Union members moved locations and set theirtarget toWeston Foods, owned by the Weston family,theowners of Loblaw.

"Loblaws hasn't taken us to court. There's no injunction. They've had two days to file an injunction. They haven't done that," saidChris MacDonald, assistant to Unifor national president Jerry Dias andlead negotiator for Dominion workers.

"We've complied with every injunction we've ever had and it's a shame that the company is relying on the St. John's police here to do their dirty work."

MacDonald said police told him they were preparing to arrest people for blocking trucks exiting the Mount Pearl property. He said he's not sure why police are trying to enforce an injunction that doesn't exist, and the reason he was given is that police are enforcing the Highway Traffic Act. The union said the picket line outside of the bakery is peaceful.

"We're in the driveway. We're not even on the road," MacDonald said.

Hoping to a get a deal done

Loblaw lost dozens of other injunctions it filed Monday, which would have prevented striking employees from popping up at other locations owned or associated with the business.

It's not clear if Weston Foods was on that list, but30 Shoppers Drug Mart locations, three No Frills stores, three independent grocers andthe company's wholesale club store were. The injunction on the distribution centre won in court.

Dominion employees have been on the picket line since August, calling for more full-time jobs as theunion saysmore than 80 per cent of workers are part time and 60 full-time jobs were converted into part-time jobs in 2019.

MacDonald said picketers are preventing trucks with product from exiting Weston Foods to try to get Loblaw back to the bargaining table.

"We've booked rooms at the St. John's Sheraton tomorrow. We've tried to get them back to the bargaining table, we've booked rooms, we've brought our bargaining committeein from all over the province," he said.

"We're going there prepared to get a deal. Instead of telling us that they're coming to get a deal, Loblawsis relying on the police to do their work here. And instead of getting back to the bargaining table they'd rather put us through this."

Picketers told CBC News nobody had been detained as police began clearing out shortly after 8:30 p.m.Some police units remained on scene.

CBC News has requested comment from both the RNC andLoblaw'sAtlantic director of corporate affairs.

Read morefrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador