OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canadian Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon has rejected a request by Canadian Nationwide Railway (TSX:) to provoke binding arbitration in a labor dispute with the Teamsters union, a spokesman for the minister mentioned on Thursday.
In a letter to CN Rail’s attorneys, MacKinnon mentioned it was the shared duty of the corporate and the union to barter in good religion. The letter, despatched on Wednesday, was launched by the Teamsters.
Talks between CN Railway and Canadian Pacific (NYSE:) Kansas Metropolis – the nation’s two largest rail firms – and the Teamsters are deadlocked, with both sides blaming the opposite.
CN Rail mentioned it was dissatisfied by MacKinnon’s resolution, saying he must rethink if the union didn’t “get severe and have interaction meaningfully on the negotiating desk”.
The businesses say they’ll begin locking out staff on Aug. 22 if they can’t attain a labor deal, whereas the union says it is able to name a strike for that date. A simultaneous stoppage at each firms may inflict billions of {dollars}’ value of financial injury.