
Striking workers at Halifax newspaper vote overwhelmingly in favour of new deal
HALIFAX — A labour dispute at Canada’s largest independently owned daily newspaper ended Thursday after striking workers voted overwhelmingly in favour of a new contract.
Newsroom employees at the Halifax Chronicle Herald voted 94 per cent in favour of the new eight-year deal, which union president Ingrid Bulmer described as a “relief” for members who have spent 18 months on the picket line.
“It’s been a long haul,” the head of the Halifax Typographical Union, a local of CWA Canada, said after Thursday’s vote. “Most people are just relieved to have this chapter closed.”
Of the roughly 60 reporters, photographers, editors and support staff that walked off the job in January 2016, 25 will return to work next week, 26 are laid off, one is moving to Herald’s newly-acquired Cape Breton Post newspaper and the rest quit during the protracted strike.