U.S. Steel locks out workers at Nanticoke, Ont., plant

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 April 2013 | 22.46

Company bought Hamilton, Ont.-based Stelco in 2007

The Canadian Press

Posted: Apr 28, 2013 12:04 PM ET

Last Updated: Apr 29, 2013 7:25 AM ET

 

U.S. Steel locked out almost 1,000 unionized workers at its facility in Nanticoke, Ont., Sunday, raising questions from employees about promises the company made to the federal government about continuing production in Canada.

'From what we can see, production has been shifted to the United States.'

—Bill Ferguson, president, Steelworkers Local 8782

The company shut the gates of its Lake Erie Works plant, located about 130 kilometres southwest of Toronto, at 9 a.m. just as it had warned it would, leaving hundreds of angry workers gathered outside.

"The gates are now closed on one of the most productive steel mills in North America, one of the most efficient steel mills in North America," said Bill Ferguson, president of Steelworkers Local 8782.

"From what we can see, production has been shifted to the United States."

The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Company purchased Stelco in 2007

U.S. Steel makes steel for a number of operations from cars to building construction.

It bought one of Canada's largest steel manufacturers — the Hamilton-based company formerly known as Stelco — in 2007.

The purchase triggered a long dispute between the federal government and the company over broken promises U.S. Steel made to secure approval to buy Stelco.

The two sides settled the case in late 2011 with an agreement that saw the company promise to keep producing steel in Canada for at least another four years and make major capital investments at its Canadian mills.

In light of the lockout, Ferguson said the union is now wondering what exactly the terms of that agreement were.

"Nobody knows what's going on here," he said.

Union voted Tuesday to reject latest offer

Notice of Sunday's lockout was sent to the United Steelworkers Union on Thursday under a mutual agreement to give 72-hours notice of a strike or lockout.

On Tuesday, the union membership had voted 70 per cent to reject a final contract offer from the company that would eliminate cost-of-living wage increases, reduce holidays and amount to a virtual standstill in wages.

Ferguson said workers would have received an extra $1 an hour under the company's latest offer, but that had already been mandated under the cost-of-living clause in the previous agreement.

'Sombre mood'

According to the union, there are 978 members of the bargaining unit at Nanticoke.

"It's a sombre mood, but there's a lot of anger," Ferguson said of the workers gathered outside the plant Sunday morning.

The union offered earlier this week to keep its members on the jobs and negotiate further, but that was rejected by the company.

"This was an operation that was probably a top plate operation in Canada. When it was sold to the Americans it almost became a second tier operation," Ferguson said, calling the company's current approach to talks with the union "radically different" from its predecessor.

According to the company website, the Lake Erie Works facility makes 2.25 million tonnes of slabs and 3 million tonnes of high-quality hot rolled coils.

This is the third time U.S. Steel has locked out Ontario workers since purchasing plants in Hamilton and Nanticoke in 2007.

The company reached an agreement with the United Steelworkers union in April 2010, ending an eight-month lockout. And a lockout at U.S. Steel's Hamilton plant lasted from November 2010 to October 2011.

With files from CBC News

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