
To carry a gathering with the union on Sunday amid nationwide additional time ban through Canada Publish Mel Staff
The Canada Post was set on Sunday to meet with its union negotiaters amid warnings of delayed mail delivery delayed by the national ban on overtime for postal workers.
Sunday’s meeting will be the first of the weekend, a spokesperson of the Crown Corporation said.
A mediation will be at hand to work with parties, which has been dead for months in efforts to secure a new collective bargaining agreement.
The Canada Post on Wednesday submitted its latest proposals to the Sangh, including an increase in salary and a plan to roll a fleet of part -time workers.
The Canadian Association of the postal staff has so far offered a formal response to the proposals, but the request for a two -week “Trust” to consider the deal was rejected by the employer.
The final-winning talks between the Canada Post and its union fell on Thursday night without a deal- but the Sangh is going on a nationwide strike for now. Instead, it has asked workers to deny overtime as it considers its next step.
On Sunday, the Sangh said that its negotiators had worked hard to carefully evaluate the proposals and prepare the reactions before the meeting.
In an email, Cupw criticized the Canada Post to reject its Trus proposal, stating that it left the negotiaters with only a few days to comb through the legal words of the 700-Page proposal.
The Sangh wrote in a statement, “If the instability hangs on these negotiations, it is due to the unrelated stance and time management of the Canada Post.”
The most recent agreement among the parties, which was extended by the Canada Industrial Relations Board, ended on Thursday after Ottawa intervened in the month-long holiday-weather strike at the end of last year.

While Cupw had issued a 72-hour strike notice in the first week, in which workers could be seen getting out of the job for the first time on Friday morning, instead the Sangh National ban issued on overtime work While it considered the latest deal.
The Sangh said in a bulletin last week that “wages low” in the most recent proposals of Canada Post and other major sticking points in talks.
The Canada Post said the proposals reflect its financial realities.
An Industrial Inquiry Commission established by the federal government found that the postal service was effectively “bankrupt” and recommended a series of structural changes in a report released earlier this month.
This included recommendations to phase out the daily door-to-door delivery and implement a “dynamic routing” system that could change the route of the mail carrier on a daily basis.