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NEWS

September 24, 2025

MEDIA RELEASE - LDB stores join picket lines in ongoing public service job ac...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
September 24, 2025 

LDB stores join picket lines in ongoing public service job action

 

BURNABY, B.C
. –
The B.C. General Employees' Union (BCGEU) escalated strike action today as over 600 workers walked off the job at 25 Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB) retail stores across the province. These locations were chosen because they represent a significant source of government revenue. By withholding their labour at both warehouses and retail stores, public service workers are sending a clear message: they are essential to generating the revenue that funds the vital services British Columbians depend on every day. 

In addition to the LDB stores, nearly 1,000 workers at a multi-ministry site (Agriculture, Environment, Forests, Jobs, Tourism, Water) on Jutland Road in Victoria have joined the province-wide strike in B.C.'s public service. 
These actions build on the strength of over 14,000 public service workers already on strike, significantly escalating pressure on government to return to the bargaining table with a fair wage mandate. 

"Starting this week, public service workers have been forced to significantly escalate strike action," said Paul Finch, BCGEU President and chair of the Public Service Bargaining Committee. "We recognize this escalation will impact the restaurant industry and small businesses, who are being caught in the middle of this dispute. That's why we're calling on them to join us in pressing government to return to the table. Like them, we are frustrated that government continues to stall and refuses to return to the table to negotiate." 

The union points to strong support from the public: a recent Leger poll found that 81 per cent of British Columbians support wage increases at or above inflation for public service workers. 

"These poll results confirm what we've heard on the picket lines - British Columbians stand with public service workers," added Finch. "A fair deal isn't just about workers - it's about ensuring stable public services and keeping B.C.'s economy moving. The public understands that, and now it's time for government to do the same." 

Click here to view LEGER Report on BCGEU Public Opinion Polling 

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For more information, contact BCGEU Communications:
Nadja Komnenic: [email protected] | 604.442.2289 
Backgrounder: https://www.bargainingbc.ca/public_service



UWU/MoveUP

September 23, 2025

Public Service Members - Things are Escalating - BC General Employees' Union ...

Hi BCGEU -– starting today, we're going to be sending out a brief Escalation Update whenever the strike expands, so you have the info you need at a glance. 

Today's Escalation (Tuesday, Sept 23)

 

  • 2,800 additional workers are joining the strike today, including workers in Mining, Health, Forests, Transportation, Vehicle Safety, and more. This brings the total of BCGEU members on strike to over 10,300!

 

Worksites added today:

  1. 1515 Blanshard, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  2. 3400 Davidson Ave, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  3. 818 Fort St, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  4. 727 Fisgard Street, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  5. 940 Blanshard, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  6. 1150 McKenzie Ave, Victoria – picket line went up at 7:30am 
  7. 102 Industrial Place, Penticton – picket line went up at 8:30am  
  8. 205 Industrial Rd G, Cranbrook – no picket line; members working from this site are picketing at 117 10th Ave 
  9. 1500 Woolridge St, Coquitlam – picket line went up at 8am 
  10. 1801 Princeton-Kamloops Highway, Kamloops – members working from this site are picketing at 441 & 447 Columbia Street or 9881 Dallas Drive. 

In addition, the following Commercial Vehicle Safety and Enforcement (CVSE) sites are also struck, and members working at these sites should report to their nearest picket line, which can be found here:

  • 7201 Trans Canada Hwy, Duncan 
  • Highway 97, Fort Nelson 
  • 300 – 10003 110th Ave, Fort St. John 
  • 837 Park Drive, Golden 
  • 63620 Lougheed Highway, Hope 
  • 58705 Trans Canada Highway, Hope 
  • 100 Main Street, Penticton 
  • 2575 W Trans-Canada Hwy, Kamloops 
  • 2650 W Trans-Canada Hwy, Kamloops 
  • 58710 Trans Canada Highway, Hope 
  • 8150 Nordel Way, Delta 
  • 316 – 176th Street, Surrey 
  • 1326 Island Highway East, Nanoose Bay 
  • 360 – 1011 4th Avenue, Red Rock/Prince George 
  • 3870 Hwy 97 North, Quesnel 
  • Highway 3, Sparwood 
  • Hwy 16 East, Valemount 

If you or your team's worksite, home base or headquarters is one of the addresses listed above, you are on strike. Regardless of how often you work or if you work remotely, if your or your team's worksite, home base or headquarters is included in the above list, you are on strike. If you're unsure of your home base or headquarters, talk with your coworkers or check the address on your paycheque, letter of employment, telework agreement and/or physical address of your worksite. Knowing your worksite is critical to ensuring you don't unknowingly scab (i.e., work when you're actually on strike). For more information, review "How do I determine if my worksite is on strike?" in our FAQs here.

The energy on the picket lines is high, and members are showing strength, creativity, and solidarity in every corner of the province. That energy is fueling our fight.

What's next:
We'll send the next Escalation Update as soon as there's another escalation.


In solidarity,

Your Public Sector Bargaining Committee

 



UWU/MoveUP

September 23, 2025

MEDIA ADVISORY - BCGEU job escalation update - BC General Employees' Union (B...

Media Advisory 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
September 23, 2025 

BCGEU escalates strike action across B.C. as government refuses to negotiate
 


BURNABY
–
The B.C. General Employees' Union (BCGEU) is continuing its sharp escalation of job action this week as the province-wide public service strike enters its fourth week-the longest public service strike in B.C.'s history. 
Today, workers have walked off the job at additional sites in Victoria, Penticton, Cranbrook, Coquitlam and Kamloops. In total, more than 12,500 public service workers are now engaged in job action at 63 sites across the province, including 33 active picket lines. Escalations will continue throughout the week.

Until now, BCGEU members have focused job action on core government operations in an effort to avoid disrupting the public. But government's continued refusal to negotiate has left workers no choice but to escalate sharply. 

Sites joining strike action today include: 

  • 1515 Blanshard, Victoria 
  • 3400 Davidson Ave, Victoria 
  • 818 Fort St, Victoria 
  • 940 Blanshard, Victoria 
  • 1150 McKenzie Ave, Victoria 
  • 102 Industrial Place, Penticton 
  • 205 Industrial Rd G, Cranbrook 
  • 1500 Woolridge, Coquitlam
  • 727 Fisgard, Victoria 
  • 1801 Princeton-Kamloops Hwy, Kamloops 

 
Members at these sites work across a wide range of public services, including the Ministries of Health; Children and Family Development; Public Safety and Solicitor General; Attorney General; Citizens' Services; and Transportation and Transit, as well as the BC Conservation Service and Commercial Vehicle Safety and Enforcement (CVSE). 
 

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For more information, contact BCGEU Communications:

Nadja Komnenic: [email protected] | 604.442.2289
Backgrounder:https://www.bargainingbc.ca/public_service



UWU/MoveUP

September 22, 2025

To all non public service members - Strike escalation targets liquor and cann...

10,000 Strong and Not Stopping until Government Offers a Fair Deal!

For three weeks, members in the public service have been marching on picket lines, and growing incredible public support, for a contract that can tackle the affordability crisis and sustain the public services you need most. 

For three weeks, the B.C. government had the chance to renew their wage mandate and heed the call of over 4,600-plus citizens who sent them a letter, demanding that they fund the frontlines, fix the balance of excluded managers to unionized workers, and settle a fair deal . 

This is what government has done instead: 

👎 Made false claims about bargaining (this round, and previous rounds) 

👎 Tried (and failed) to reach a deal with another bargaining association to undermine our fight for fair wages across public services 

👎 Maintained a wage offer that will keep workers in an affordability crisis 

👎 Risked B.C's economy and services 


So, our public service members are turning up the pressure: Early this morning, members across Liquor Distribution (LDB) centres and warehouses walked off the job. In concert with members at the LDB Headquarters in Burnaby, and five other newly struck worksites, this raises our historic job action to 10,000 striking workers! 

Hear BCGEU President Paul Finch talk more about today's escalation with media outside of the Delta LDB Warehouse, where members walked off the job at 9:30 a.m. And see the full list of active picket lines by visiting www.bcgeu.ca/public_service 
 

Click here to watch YouTube video:
"Public Service Strike - Escalation Announcement at Delta LDB Warehouse - Sept 22, 2025"

 

Why Liquor & Cannabis?

While the Public Service Bargaining Committee has tried, to date, to roll out a strike strategy that minimized the impacts on the public, today's actions will be felt by B.C residents.

It's important to understand though that this labour gap will be far worse (and more permanent) if government doesn't come back with a better wage mandate that can attract and retain the workers needed to sustain public services in the long term.

Today's escalation is about forcing your elected leaders to deal with something they could have easily avoided - fallout in an important industry - so they face the fact that offering public service workers a fair, inflation-fighting contract is the best way to protect B.C's economy. It's important that we draw a hard line now because the outcome of public service bargaining is set to influence bargaining at many other tables. This is our entire union's fight! 

Solidarity actions

As the government's first quarterly budget report last week confirmed: B.C. is not facing a fiscal crisis. Our debt-to-GDP ratio is among the lowest in the country, and debt servicing costs are manageable. None of this is a barrier to paying public service workers a fair wage. 

Government's current offer of 3.5 per cent over two years falls short of inflation projections for B.C. over the same period. Wages in B.C. are up 40.6 per cent since 2016 but public service workers have only seen a 27.2 per cent increase. We're on strike to close that 13.4 per cent gap and keep up with the cost of living. Public service workers cannot keep falling behind.

If this government is serious about building a strong economy and protecting the services British Columbians rely on, it must treat the workers who make that economy run with fairness and respect. And that starts with a fair deal at the bargaining table. 
 
In solidarity,
 
Paul Finch,
BCGEU President



UWU/MoveUP

September 22, 2025

Strike escalation targets liquor and cannabis industry - BC General Employees...

10,000 Strong and Not Stopping Until We Get a Fair Deal! 

For three weeks we have been engaged in targeted strike action to bring your employer back to the negotiating table. While several thousand BCGEU members have marched on picket lines across the province, government has attempted and failed to reach a deal with another bargaining association to undermine our efforts; misrepresented and made blatantly false claims about our negotiating asks (as well as prior rounds of bargaining); and has used revised Q1 financial estimates to argue against negotiating with your bargaining committee. 

They've refused to negotiate since our membership overwhelmingly rejected their mandate offer by 93%. Since then, we have patiently outlined our case to the public, highlighting how our contracts have fallen below inflation as well as the average wage in B.C. over the past decade. We've also emphasized the staggering increase in excluded and management positions within our bargaining unit, and the failure to fund frontline work throughout that period.

Over these weeks, out strike strategy has targeted core government operations while minimizing direct impact on the general public. And instead of responding with a renewed wage mandate, the government has chosen to stand by a low-ball offer that will keep you in an affordability crisis, risking B.C's economy and services. So, we're showing them what your labour is worth: Early this morning, members at all Liquor Distribution (LDB) centres and warehouses started walking off the job to join our strike. 

In concert with members at the LDB Headquarters in Burnaby, and five other newly struck worksites (see list below to confirm if you're picketing), this raises our historic job action to 10,000 striking workers! 

Are you striking today?

Regardless of how often you work or if you work remotely, if your or your team's worksite, home base or headquarters is included in the following list, you are on strike today. If you're unsure of your home base or headquarters, talk with your coworkers or check the address on your paycheque, letter of employment, telework agreement and/or physical address of your worksite. Knowing your worksite is critical to ensuring you don't unknowingly scab (i.e., work when you're actually on strike). For more, review "How do I determine if my worksite is on strike?" in our FAQs here. 

  • 2219 Government, Victoria - on strike as of 7 a.m. - picketing at 675 Belleville. 
  • 800 Johnson, Victoria - Strike began 7:30 a.m. - picketing at 675 Belleville. 
  • 835 Humboldt St, Victoria – Strike began at 7:30 a.m. 
  • 3383 Gilmore, Burnaby – Strike began at 8 a.m. 
  • 4940 Canada Way, Burnaby - Strike began 8 a.m. - picketing at 3383 Gilmore, Burnaby 
  • 815 Hornby, Vancouver - Strike began 8 a.m. 
  • 605 Robson St, Vancouver - Strike began 8 a.m. - picketers directed to nearest picket line 
  • 7003 72 St., Delta – Strike began with walkout at 9:30 a.m. 
  • 3389 No 6 Rd, Richmond – on strike as of morning shift change 
  • 9881 Dallas Drive, Kamloops – on strike as of morning shift change 

Watch Delta LDB Workers Walk Off the Job

Hear BCGEU President Paul Finch talk more about today's escalation with media outside of the Delta LDB Warehouse, where members walked off the job at 9:30 a.m! 
 

Click here to watch YouTube video:
"Public Service Strike - Escalation Announcement at Delta LDB Warehouse - Sept 22, 2025"

Our strike strategy

Who goes on strike and when is a strategic decision that your bargaining committee is making carefully to apply maximum pressure on the employer. While we've tried, to date, to minimize the impacts on the public, today's actions will be felt by B.C residents. 

This labour gap though, will be far worse (and more permanent) if government doesn't come back with a better wage mandate that can attract and retain the workers needed to sustain public services into the future. 

We warned the employer that we would be forced to escalate – now they must deal with the industry fallout and face the fact that offering public service workers a fair, inflation-fighting contract is the best way to protect B.C's economy. 

Solidarity Actions

If you're not currently engaged in job action, you can take these actions to support fellow public service workers on the lines: 
• Visit a picket line near you, click here to see the list of picket locations.
• Send an email to your MLA calling for a fair deal for public service workers.
• Share BCGEU social media content on Facebook and Instagram

Strike quick links

For questions about striking worksites, remote work and how to avoid scabbing – see the FAQ under About Job Action to find the answers to:
 
• Which worksites are on strike? 
• How do I determine if my worksite is on strike? 
• What is scabbing? How do I avoid doing it? 
• What would a strike mean for remote workers? 
 
Sign up for Payworks to make sure you're paid for any strike duties you're assigned, whether or not you're part of the current job action. To do so, check your inbox for an email from [email protected] and follow the instructions. You will be a sked to confirm your identity, to create your login credentials and to set up direct deposit by providing your banking information. For further info about Payworks, review the Public Service FAQ here. 


Prepare a picket pass for essential services or emergency duties. If your worksite is on strike and you are scheduled by the employer to perform essential service duties, or if you're called in by the employer due to an emergency (as determined by the employer), you must prepare a "picket pass" at http://bcgeu.ca/picket-pass and show your pass to a BCGEU picket captain at the picket line to be cleared to cross and complete your work (i.e., to not scab). NOTE: If your shift is scheduled after picket line hours (e.g., weekend, midnight, etc.), you must email [email protected] to report your attendance instead of reporting to a picket captain. For further info about picket passes and essential services/emergency duties, review the Public Service FAQs here. 

As the government's first quarterly budget report last week confirmed: B.C. is not facing a fiscal crisis. Our debt-to-GDP ratio is among the lowest in the country, and debt servicing costs are manageable. None of this is a barrier to paying public service workers a fair wage. 

Government's current offer of 3.5 per cent over two years falls short of inflation projections for B.C. over the same period. Wages in B.C. are up 40.6 per cent since 2016 but public service workers have only seen a 27.2 per cent increase. We're on strike to close that 13.4-per cent gap and keep up with the cost of living. Public service workers cannot keep falling behind. 

If this government is serious about building a strong economy and protecting the services British Columbians rely on, it must treat the workers who make that economy run with fairness and respect. And that starts with a fair deal at the bargaining table. 

 
In solidarity,
Your Public Service Bargaining Committee



UWU/MoveUP

September 22, 2025

BCGEU Escalates Job Action to Liquor & Cannabis Warehouses, LDB Head Office, ...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 22, 2025 

BCGEU Escalates Job Action to Liquor & Cannabis Warehouses, LDB Head Office, and Key Ministry Worksites in Victoria, Burnaby, and Vancouver

BURNABY, B.C. – Public service workers across B.C. are ramping up strike action this week after the provincial government once again refused to return to the bargaining table with a fair wage mandate.

Until now, BCGEU members have focused job action on core government operations in an effort to avoid disrupting the public. But government's continued refusal to negotiate has left workers no choice but to escalate sharply.

As of today, the BC LDB (Liquor Distribution Branch) Liquor and Cannabis warehouses and head office, along with five additional ministry worksites in Victoria and Vancouver, are on strike. In total, more than 10,000 public service workers are now engaged in job action at 36 sites across the province, including 28 active picket lines. Escalations will continue throughout the week.

Newly impacted worksites include:

  • 2219 Government , Victoria - on strike as of 7 a.m. - picketing at 675 Belleville.
  • 800 Johnson, Victoria - Strike begins 7:30 a.m. - picketing at 675 Belleville.
  • 835 Humboldt St, Victoria – Strike begins at 7:30 a.m. 
  • 3383 Gilmore, Burnaby – Strike begins at 8 a.m.
  • 4940 Canada Way, Burnaby - Strike begins 8 a.m. - picketing at 3383 Gilmore, Burnaby
  • 815 Hornby, Vancouver - Strike begins 8 a.m.
  • 605 Robson St, Vancouver - Strike begins 8 a.m.
  • 7003 72 St., Delta – On strike as of 9:30am 
  • 3389 No 6 Rd, Richmond – on strike as of morning shift change 
  • 9881 Dallas Drive, Kamloops – on strike as of morning shift change 

"Up to now, we've focused job action on government operations while minimizing disruptions for the public," said Paul Finch, BCGEU president and chair of the public service bargaining committee. "But with government refusing to come back to the table, we're left with no choice. Public service workers cannot keep falling further behind. Government's low offer is essentially telling British Columbians to expect cuts to the services they depend on. We will continue escalating until government brings a fair wage mandate. The next move is theirs."

Key Facts:

  • Government's current wage offer of 3.5% is well below B.C.'s projected 4.9% inflation rate.
  • Since 2016, wages in B.C. have risen 40.6%, while public service workers' pay has only increased 27.2%-a 13.4-point gap.
  • Without fair wages, government risks losing the very workers who deliver essential services: wildfire fighters, social workers, sheriffs, court clerks, frontline administrative professionals and many more.

BCGEU members deliver the services that keep communities safe, support economic growth, and maintain critical government programs. Unless government comes back to the table with a serious wage offer, job action will continue to escalate.

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For more information, contact BCGEU Communications:

Nadja Komnenic: [email protected] | 604.442.2289
Backgrounder: https://www.bargainingbc.ca/public_service



UWU/MoveUP

September 22, 2025

BCGEU president media availability re: new job escalation - BC General Employ...

MEDIA ADVISORY 


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 22, 2025 

BCGEU president media availability re: new job escalation


BURNABY, B.C.
–
BCGEU President, Paul Finch, who also serves as chair of the public service bargaining committee, will be on site at the Liquor Distribution Branch's (LDB) Delta Distribution Centre this morning to provide an update on a sharp rise in public service job action this week. 

  • Who: Paul Finch, BCGEU president and chair of the public service bargaining committee 
  • What: An update from Paul Finch on further public service job action 
  • Where: LDB Delta Distribution Centre: 7003 72 St, Delta 
  • When: 9:30 a.m.

After three weeks of job action and continued refusal by the provincial government to return to the bargaining table with a revised wage mandate, Finch will be announcing escalation of job action this week at sites across the province.

A full list of existing picket line locations can be found here. 

"The public service bargaining committee is ready to return to the table as soon as government presents a fair, improved wage mandate," said Paul Finch, BCGEU president and chair of the public service bargaining committee. "Public service workers can't keep falling behind-wages in B.C. have risen 40.6% since 2016, yet public service workers have only seen a 27.2% increase. We're on job action to close that 13.4-point gap and keep up with the cost of living. If government refuses to negotiate, our union will continue to sharply escalate job action across the province." 

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For more information, contact BCGEU Communications:

Nadja Komnenic: [email protected] | 604.442.2289
Backgrounder: https://www.bargainingbc.ca/public_service



UWU/MoveUP

September 19, 2025

Public service strike builds momentum in week three - BC General Employees' U...

Dear BCGEU,

Things are moving quickly in our union's public service strike. From escalating job action to our response to government's update on the provincial economy, below is a roundup of week three of the strike. 

On Monday the provincial government announced that B.C.'s economy has shown resilience despite disruption and uncertainty from the global trade conflict. This confirmed what we've been saying all along: investing in public service workers – and all workers across the public sector – is critical for sustaining the services British Columbians rely on, and to driving B.C.'s economy forward. 

This week, we escalated job action in several key areas: 

  • Public service workers who support B.C.'s mining operations joined the strike. 
  • An overtime ban was announced in corrections and sheriff services. 
  • Workers in citizens' services and gaming also joined picket lines, adding strength to week three of job action. 

📣 Here are a few news stories from the week: 

BCGEU strike nearly into its third week – CBC 
BCGEU strike extends to province's mining operations - CityNews 
Escalation of B.C. public service strike hits citizens' services and gaming branch - CTV 

Now, more than 8,500 public service workers are engaged in job action: on picket lines, through overtime bans, and even in virtual picketing teams. Every day 400–600 virtual picketers reach out to their communities to explain the strike, gather signatures for our letter-writing campaign, and share stories online. In fact, this is the first BCGEU strike in history to include virtual picketing - enabling struck workers who live more than 30 km from a picket line, or who need an accommodation, to fully participate. 

So far, our escalation strategy has targeted critical areas of government operations rather than inconveniencing the general public. Each day, affected services slow, backlogs build, and decision-makers feel the pressure. But if government refuses to return to the table with a revised wage offer, we will soon be forced to escalate sharply - expanding strike action to a broader group of members and creating greater impacts on the public. 

We don't want to create delays or inconvenience British Columbians. We want a fair collective agreement. We want to return to the bargaining table and end this strike. 

With your help we can get government back to the bargaining table. Send an email to your MLA calling for a fair deal for public service workers. And if you're near one of these picket lines, please stop by to show your support! 

In solidarity,
 
Paul Finch 
BCGEU president 



UWU/MoveUP

September 18, 2025

BCGEU escalates job action with new picket lines in Victoria and Burnaby - BC...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
September 18, 2025 

BCGEU escalates job action with new picket lines in Victoria and Burnaby
 


BURNABY, B.C.
–
The BC General Employees' Union (BCGEU) has expanded job action today to two strategically chosen sites that highlight the essential role public service workers play in B.C.'s economy and daily services: 


Victoria: 4464 Markham Street (Ministry of Citizens' Services) 
Burnaby: 4370 Dominion Street (Gaming Policy and Enforcement Branch) 


Members at the Ministry of Citizens' Services deliver front-line services such as issuing BC Services Cards, processing Freedom of Information requests, maintaining provincial information technology systems, and facilitating BC Bids. Their absence is expected to create delays for individuals, businesses and government ministries, underscoring the critical nature of their work. 


Members at the Gaming Policy and Enforcement Branch regulate the province's gaming industry, including oversight of the B.C. Lottery Corporation. Withdrawing their labour could disrupt gambling service providers and slow a significant provincial revenue stream. 


By broadening job action to these areas of B.C.'s public service, the BCGEU is increasing pressure on government to return to the bargaining table with an improved wage offer, while demonstrating the indispensable contributions of its members to the people of British Columbia and the provincial economy.

With today's escalation, there are now more than 4,600 members on strike at 19 picket lines in cities across the province (Victoria, Surrey, Nanaimo, Kamloops, Williams Lake, Kelowna, Cranbrook, Nelson, Fort St. John, Smithers, Vancouver, Prince George and Burnaby). Combined with overtime bans by an additional 3,900 other members, this escalation means there are now over 8,500 BCGEU members taking job action across B.C. in effort to get the government to return to the bargaining table with an improved wage offer.


"These workers provide services that touch the daily lives of British Columbians-from issuing BC Services Cards and processing Freedom of Information requests, to maintaining IT infrastructure and managing BC Bids, the platform that connects public sector organizations with contractors," said Paul Finch, BCGEU president and chair of the public service bargaining committee. "When this work stops, it creates real pressure on government to return to the table with a fair wage offer." 

"Until now, our job action has primarily targeted core government operations, with the exception of the Royal BC Museum. But government's refusal to return to the table with a fair wage offer leaves us no choice but to escalate. We are now expanding job action to sites that are essential to both the public and businesses-a step we had hoped to avoid." 

"Government's first quarterly budget report confirmed what we've been saying: B.C. is not facing a fiscal crisis. Our debt-to-GDP ratio is among the lowest in the country, and debt servicing costs are manageable. None of this is a barrier to paying public service workers a fair wage.


"Investing in public service workers is essential to sustaining the services British Columbians rely on and to keeping our economy strong," added Finch. "If Finance Minister Brenda Bailey is serious about protecting these services now and into the future, government must show fairness and respect to the workers who deliver them-and that begins with a fair deal at the bargaining table." 

"The government's current offer of 3.5 per cent over two years falls short of inflation projections for B.C. over the same period. Wages in B.C. are up 40.6 per cent since 2016, but public service workers have only seen a 27.2 per cent increase. We're on strike to close that 13.4-point gap and keep up with the cost of living. Public service workers cannot keep falling behind." 


A full and up-to-date list of active picket lines can be found here.

 

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For more information, contact BCGEU Communications: 

Nadja Komnenic: [email protected] | 604.442.2289
Backgrounder: https://www.bargainingbc.ca/public_service



UWU/MoveUP