IMP Aerostructures workers go on strike in Amherst - Action News
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Nova Scotia

IMP Aerostructures workers go on strike in Amherst

Around 130 workers at the IMP Aerostructures in Amherst, N.S., walked off the job on Monday, hours after 93 per cent of union members voted against the company's latest contract offer.

Union president says the days of getting paid well at the company 'are gone'

People with signs on a sunny day.
Workers from IMP Aerostructures in Amherst on a picket line after they voted against the latest contract offer from the company. (Submitted by Jill Penny)

Around 130 workers at IMP Aerostructures in Amherst, N.S., walked off the job on Monday, hours after 93 per cent of union members voted against the company's latest contract offer.

The aerospace manufacturer founded by billionaire Kenneth C. Rowe offered an initial deal that included a1.5 per cent raise over three years, which was later renegotiated to twoper cent, saidMike Blenkhorn, president of the United Steelworkers Local 4883.

Butthatdoesn't go far enough to keep up with rising prices, he said.Theunion is shooting for a fiveper cent wage hike.

"It just gives them a chance to recoup and keep moving forward."

The national inflation rate stood at 2.7 per centyear-over-year inJune, according to Statistics Canada.

Blenkhorn also saidworkers in Amherst are paid less for the same type of work compared to those in other parts of the province, especially Halifax.

Plane
IMP Aerospace is headquartered in Halifax. It has contracts with the federal government and serves both military and commercial clients. (Phonse Jessome/CBC)

Carla Thibodeau, a USW staff representative for the Atlantic provinces, said the union had accepted a deal with wage increases of zero per cent over three years during the COVID-19 pandemic to help ensure the company would survive in Amherst during a period of economic uncertainty.

Thibodeau said giving the company's workers a fair wage is now long overdue.

"Our members really felt that they deserved more, that they deserve to have a fair contract that would help bridge the gap between their wages and other wages of employees in a similar sector," she said.

"We feel that the offer on the table is not closing that gap. It is not enough to recoup the losses of the last several years."

Blenkhorn saidabout 90 per cent of the union local's members joined the picket line on Monday.

Some local residents showed their support on Tuesday by providing food, coffee, Gatorade and other goods to the striking workers, he said.

"There was a day when IMP people would leave a government job to come work at IMP because you were respected, you were well paid. Those days are gone," he said. "We care about our membership a great deal and we feel that we've been unfairly treated."

IMP Aerospace did notrespond to requests for an interview.

The company is headquartered in Halifax, has contracts with the federal government and serves both military and commercial clients.