Manitoba

Manitoba Public Insurance strike ends as workers vote to accept new 4-year contract

Unionized workers at Manitoba Public Insurance have voted to accept a new four-year contract with the Crown corporation, ending a strike that began Aug. 28. 

Union, MPI working to finalize return-to-work agreement to have workers back on job Friday

A man at a desk
Justice Minister Matt Wiebe, who is also the minister responsible for MPI, held a news conference Wednesday to speak about the new deal. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

Unionized workers at Manitoba Public Insurance have voted to accept a new four-year contract with the Crown corporation, ending a strike that lasted more than two months.

The new contract will provide workers with wage increases of at least 13 per cent over four years, a Wednesday night news release from the Manitoba Government and General Employees' Union said.

"I think they cleared the tunnel and now I feel it's more like they probably have a mountain to climb though," MGEU president Kyle Ross said later in an interview with CBC. "There's such a backlog of work, they're going to be very busy for quite a while." 

The agreement also includes a one-time lump sum signing bonus of $1,800 for full-time employees, which would be pro-rated for part-time employees, according to MGEU.

The workers, who have been on strike since Aug. 28, will also receive two weeks' pay to recognize the stalled negotiations between the Oct. 3 provincial election and the new government being sworn in.

MPI added in a news release Wednesday that all service and claim centres across the province, including the physical damage centre and contact centre, will reopen at 1 p.m. Friday and remain open until 4:30 p.m. 

The release added appointments scheduled for 1 p.m. and beyond will continue and those who have had appointments cancelled will be contacted to reschedule. 

People walk a picket line on a sidewalk
Unionized workers at Manitoba Public Insurance had been on strike since Aug. 28. (Travis Golby/CBC)

"I would say there's some concerns that they're going to face a lot of angry Manitobans when they get back to work and they open those shops," said Ross. "I'm hopeful Manitobans will recognize that they were fighting … to be treated fairly."

MGEU announced Tuesday night it had reached a tentative agreement with the public insurer, one day after rejecting an offer from the Crown corporation that included wage increases 12.2 per cent over four years. 

The agreement will see a three per cent increase for 2022 and 2023. Workers will receive a 2.9 per cent general increase with an additional 0.5 per cent retention adjustment increase in 2024 and a 2.8 per cent general increase and a 0.8 per cent retention adjustment increase in 2025, the MGEU release Wednesday said. 

"Those are good wage increases for folks who deserve it," Justice Minister Matt Wiebe, who is also the minister responsible for MPI, said during a news conference Wednesday.

"I especially want to thank the workers who spent weeks on the picket line, demonstrating for their right to a fair deal." 

New maximum step for each pay grade

Additionally, most workers will receive an additional 3.5 per cent wage increase over the life of the agreement from a new maximum increment step for each pay grade, the MGEU release said.

Ross explained the extra step would expand the six-step pay scale MPI employees go through as their tenure increases. Currently, an employee at the sixth step of the salary scale would be "topped out," he said.

MPI previously presented what it called its final offer back in September. Under provincial labour law, both sides could have applied for binding arbitration starting Oct. 27 — 60 days after the beginning of labour action — to resolve the dispute.

However, the two sides continued negotiating, after the new NDP government replaced most of MPI's board of directors and issued a mandate to the Crown corporation to resolve the labour dispute without binding arbitration.

"I have a lot of confidence in the board that's been put in place at MPI and there is a lot of work that remains to be done at MPI, so obviously the strike was our first priority, ending the strike and getting folks back to work," said Wiebe.

"But now, I think there's a lot of work that [needs] to be done to make sure MPI's delivering the services and is again, being responsible and respectful of the ratepayers in Manitoba."

Wiebe added the new agreement "really sets the tone" that the NDP are "ready to work with the working people of Manitoba to get fair deals, to make sure they feel included."

"It's been an antagonistic relationship between the previous government and workers. We want to tell workers now that we're willing to sit down with them, make sure that they get fair wages," he said.

The new collective agreement covers the period from Sept. 27, 2022 through to Sept. 26, 2026, MGEU said in its release.

Manitoba Public Insurance strike ends

1 year ago
Duration 2:49
1,700 MPI workers had been on strike since the end of August. The union says the deal they've voted to accept will see them get wage increases of at least 13 per cent over 4 years. But it's unclear what kind of initial backlogs Manitobans who need to make a claim or book a drivers test will face.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said there would be an additional 0.5 per cent retention adjustment increase in 2025. In fact, it's a 0.8 per cent.
    Nov 02, 2023 5:57 PM CT

With files from Brittany Greenslade and Gavin Axelrod