The union that represents workers at both of Canada's largest freight railroads has filed the lawsuits it had promised challenging the orders that forced employees back to work and got the trains moving again, the union announced Friday.
The lawsuits were filed Thursday afternoon, the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference said. But they won't stop the trains because the government has ordered the union to stay on the job while the arbitration process plays out.
''The right to collectively bargain is a constitutional guarantee. Without it, unions lose leverage to negotiate better wages and safer working conditions for all Canadians,'' the union's president, Paul Boucher, said Friday. ''We are confident that the law is on our side, and that workers will have their voices heard.''
One of the railroads, CPKC, declined to comment. A spokesperson for the other railroad, Canadian National, said, ''CN would have preferred a negotiated settlement. However, after nine months of attempting to reach a settlement, it was evident that the Teamsters were not looking for a resolution and were happy to keep applying pressure by inflicting damage to the Canadian economy.''
The lockouts stopped traffic in Canada on the crucial railroads this month and halted shipments to and from the United States, cutting off delivery of raw materials, along with shipping of finished products from factories and to retail shelves. They lasted a little over a day at CN and four days at CPKC.
The union doesn't want to let the precedent stand that the government can block a strike and remove a union's leverage in negotiations. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government stepped into the contract dispute after both CN and CPKC locked out their workers Aug. 22. Trudeau said he had been reluctant to intervene but saw no other option because of the railroads' economic importance.
The union challenged the order from Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon that sent the dispute into arbitration and the Canada Industrial Relations Board's decision Saturday that forced them back to work.
In the four appeals the union filed, the Teamsters asked the Federal Court of Appeal to quash the orders issued for both railroads and declare that the officials didn't have the power to block a strike. The union's lawyers demanded ''a declaration that the infringement is not a reasonable limit as prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.''