Your reading list

GSU members vote on Viterra final offer

Workers will be working to rule during the voting period

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 5, 2024

,

In a website post, GSU said the January final offer was different enough from the November final offer that members should decide for themselves. | Glacier FarmMedia photo

REGINA — Grain and General Services Union workers employed by Viterra will vote on the company’s latest final offer over the next two weeks.

Locals 1 and 2, representing country operations and head office staff, respectively, were set to walk out at 2 p.m. today if a deal had not been reached.

In a website post, GSU said the January final offer was different enough from the November final offer that members should decide for themselves.

Read Also

Alex Wood exhibits a bull at the Ag in Motion 2025 junior cattle show.

First annual Ag in Motion Junior Cattle Show kicks off with a bang

Ag in Motion 2025 had its first annual junior cattle show on July 15. The show hosted more than 20…

The offer contains, among other things, salary increases over four years, beginning with a 4.5 percent increase retroactive to Jan. 1, 2023., followed by 3.75 percent Jan. 1, 2024, and 2.5 percent in the two subsequent years.

In a news release, Viterra noted that employees continue to be eligible for annual bonus payments under the company’s short-term incentive plan.

“We believe that we have provided an offer that is fair and reasonable, one that takes into account the needs of our employees, while balancing the needs of our business through long-term labour stability,” said Jordan Jakubowski, vice-president of human resources.

The voting period lasts until Jan. 19. Viterra said it will monitor the union’s actions leading up to the vote and would “strongly consider” a lockout if union action disrupts business.

The GSU gave 72-hour strike notice Jan. 2 after members rejected the then-final offer. Negotiations continued for the next two days with the help of a federally-appointed mediator and the most recent offer was tabled late Jan. 4.

The legal strike is not being called off, according to documents on the GSU website, but members will work to rule until the results are in.

Contact karen.briere@producer.com

About the author

Karen Briere

Karen Briere

Karen Briere grew up in Canora, Sask. where her family had a grain and cattle operation. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Regina and has spent more than 30 years covering agriculture from the Western Producer’s Regina bureau.

explore

Stories from our other publications