Steelworkers Ratify Collective Agreement At IPSCO Subsidiary

Workers at scrap yard were locked out by company for seven weeks this spring.

United Steelworkers at the Wheat City Metals scrap metal processing facility in Regina, Sasketchewan, have ratified a three-year collective agreement, ending a dispute that included a seven-week lockout in April and May.

 

The IPSCO subsidiary operates as General Scrap. It has five auto shredder facilities, as well as a number of smaller scrap processing facilities in Canada.

 

The agreement is retroactive to June 1 and includes across-the-board wage increases in each year and better wage rate protection in the event of placement to lower-paying job categories.

 

"Our members stuck together throughout an unnecessary lock out situation and patiently waited for the mediation process to work its way through," said Mike Pisak, Steelworker staff representative, the union's negotiating committee chair. "We are pleased to get an agreement but don't appreciate the company's tactics, which they also used in previous negotiations, of locking out their workers to demand concessions from the outset. It was completely unnecessary."