Officials with Unifor say wage increases and equity measures are part of the three-year collective agreement ratified Tuesday evening by workers at the Taseko Gibraltar mine in Williams Lake, British Columbia.
The package includes wage increases of 13 per cent over three years and changes to the drug testing procedures, which the union says add clarity and fairness.
Also, a Women’s Advocate will be introduced to champion equity and recognize the federal labour code’s leave for Indigenous practices.
The email you need for the day’s
top news stories from Canada and around the world.
Some 500 unionized workers had been on strike since June 1 before both sides agreed on a tentative deal Sunday.
The Gibraltar mine, owned and operated by Taseko, is Canada’s second-largest open-pit copper mine and the largest employer in B.C.’s Cariboo region.
Company officials previously said that if the workers ratified the deal, work could resume as early as Wednesday.
© 2024 The Canadian Press