Management at the Port of Montreal says operations are set to resume Saturday after being disrupted by a labour dispute.
The port authority confirms that the Canada Industrial Relations Board has ordered operations to resume as of 7 a.m.
But it adds that it will take several weeks to fully re-establish the fluidity of the supply chains for both imports and exports.
On Sunday, operations at the port were greatly reduced when the Maritime Employers Association locked out nearly 1,200 longshore workers after a contract offer was rejected.
- IBC estimates $230M in insured damage claimed from Edmonton storms
- Alberta First Nation sues Ottawa over $5 treaty annuity, argues amount stuck in 1899
- Jobs hang in the balance as Ekati diamond mine in N.W.T. closing early
- WestJet flight attendants hold information pickets as strike vote takes place
The union representing longshore workers had earlier called an indefinite strike affecting two of the port’s terminals on Oct. 31.
On Tuesday, federal Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon intervened to end the dispute, asking the Canada Industrial Relations Board to order a resumption of operations and move negotiations into binding arbitration.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.