Canada Post says normal delivery times restored for most of the country
Returning to regular service so soon is proof back-to-work legislation was unnecessary, union says

The restoration of delivery service guarantees by Canada Post — three weeks after striking postal workers were forced back to work — proves the shipment backlogs Ottawa used to justify legislating an end to rotating walkouts were "fiction," says the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.
The Crown agency announced Tuesday it had caught up on most parcel delivery backlogs that had been created by the sporadic labour disruptions that began Oct. 22.
As a result, the corporation said its normal holiday service commitments were being restored across most of Canada, except the West Coast.
"With continued progress, we are now in a position to restore our normal holiday delivery service guarantees for much of the country," Canada Post said in a statement.
"This means Canadians can expect normal holiday delivery timelines for parcels. The exception remains items headed to or departing Vancouver as backlogs there continue to cause additional delays."
The announcement came as the mediation process aimed at bridging the impasse between the post office and its unionized employees came to an abrupt end.
'Total fiction'
The federal government legislated an end to job action by postal workers on Nov. 27 after Canada Post complained that a backlog of parcels had reached historic levels ahead of the crucial holiday shopping period.
At the time, Canada Post warned the backlog could take until the end of January to clear up.
The fact that service delivery guarantees are being restored just three weeks after back-to-work legislation was passed proves the parcel backlogs being claimed by Canada Post were an illusion, said CUPW national president Mike Palecek.
"The reports that we've been getting, and are still getting, is that our plants are not even operating at capacity," Palecek said in an interview.
"We have places where [Canada Post] is offering members leave without pay to go home because they don't have work. So I wouldn't just question the backlog, I would say it was total fiction."