Rail strike could cost manufacturers millions, industry says
The possibility of a halt to freight traffic on the tracks has already had an impact, said Darby, whose organization counts Ford Canada, Maple Leaf Foods, Bombardier Inc., Cenovus Energy and Moosehead Breweries among its members.
"In some cases they're pre-ordering extra inventory," he said of manufacturers generally.
"In some cases they're trying to book space on other carriers ... but on transport trucks, prices are at a premium."
The cost of a rail traffic halt would average $275,000 per company each day, according to the 225 respondents. If accurate, that means the cost for a sliver of Canada's manufacturers alone would top $433 million per week.
The manufacturers group is just one of hundreds of organizations and companies that have made submissions to the Canada Industrial Relations Board over the impact of job action at rail lines that haul more than $28 billion worth of cargo each year.
READ: Unionized workers rejecting more deals as fight for wage gains presses on
The labour minister referred the issue to the board after receiving a letter from the Canadian Propane Association, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter. The Canadian Press is not naming the sources because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
O'Regan highlighted heavy fuel, propane, food and water treatment materials needed in remote communities "and throughout Canada," said tribunal spokesman Jean-Daniel Tardif.
Darby said that Ottawa can now use "moral suasion" to wring a deal out of the two sides. Longer-term, Ottawa should look to frame rail transport as "some kind of an essential service" in order to impose binding arbitration if necessary, he said.
Teamsters Canada rejected the call for binding arbitration—a process that follows back-to-work legislation unless the two parties enter it voluntarily—or any government move to "prevent a rail stoppage," in the words of the manufacturers' letter to cabinet.
"Occasional labour disputes are a hallmark of a free and democratic society," said union spokesman Christopher Monette in an email. "It would be a step back to a time when workers had no rights."
Commuters could also feel the effects of a work stoppage.
Should one occur involving the 80 CPKC rail traffic controllers bargaining for a contract—distinct from CPKC's main group of engineers, conductors and yard workers—passenger trains that run on Canadian Pacific-owned tracks in Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal could shut down.
Thousands of riders could see major disruptions on TransLink's West Coast Express, GO Transit's Milton line and Exo's Candia, Saint-Jérôme and Vaudreuil/Hudson lines, according to the Montreal Economic Institute.