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Astaldi workers likely won't get paid before Christmas

Astaldi workers won't see a paycheque in time for the holiday season, and some workers are getting tired of the silence.

No paycheques until court process wraps up, says Siobhan Coady

Astaldi, the main contractor on the Muskrat Falls megaproject, was more than 95 per cent complete its work when it was hit with a stop work order by Nalcor. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

Ed Knox and Mark Compton have taken to copying Siobhan Coady and Dwight Ball on all their emails, complaining almost daily about not getting paid for their work at Muskrat Falls.

They say the politicians who promised to help them have gone silent.

"The lack of response is telling," Compton wrote on Wednesday. "A couple of weeks ago we were urged to wait for word on the arbitration hearing on Tuesday, Nov. 27. Well that Tuesday and another have passed without any news."

The two men are part of 122 non-unionized Astaldi employees who were kept around to work at the Muskrat Falls site after the company was kicked off the megaproject on Oct. 20.

To date, they've gone unpaid for that work, and the natural resources minister told reporters on Wednesday there's no solution in sight.

"It's before the courts and we have to await the outcome of that process," Coady said. "I've met with these workers. I've met to try and find a resolution to this situation. As you know, it is complicated."

Natural Resources Minister Siobhan Coady says the province can't intervene and find a solution for unpaid Astaldi workers while the matter is before the courts. (CBC)

Coady said government hoped to find a way to pay the workers sooner, but when Astaldi chose to take the matter to court, their hands were tied.

Coady said Nalcor wants an order for Astaldi to turn over a letter of credit — a document issued by a bank to serve as a guarantee for payments.

As long as that court fight is ongoing, Coady said the provincial government can't step in. They are not slated to be back at Supreme Court in St. John's until after Christmas.

'Pawns' in Muskrat fight

When asked if she has contacted the workers directly, Coady said the government was asked to go through the lawyer hired by the unpaid workers.

There's been little relief for Knox and Compton, and the other workers who are owed what Coady called a "handsome sum" for owed wages and benefits.

"The process is still winding it's way through arbitration, as it should, but as we have stated we should not be held hostage to this process," Compton wrote.

"Again we ask, please pay us and carry on the feud without us, we are tired of being used as pawns in the game of Muskrat Falls."