The federal government and Canada Post recently announced that the moratorium on post office closures in
rural and small towns would continue. This is excellent news for people who live in rural and small towns. It
is also great news for workers at close to 4000 public post offices. The moratorium covers 364 offices
staffed by members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) and 3603 offices staffed by members of the
Canadian Postmasters and Assistants Association.
There is no doubt that our campaign work contributed to the decision to keep the moratorium.
Background
In August 2005, CUPW launched a general campaign against closures, privatization and deregulation and a
specific campaign against Canada Post's plans to close down the mail processing plant in Quebec City. In
January 2006, the union increased pressure with its Operation Transparency campaign, which demanded Canada
Post's plans for our public post office. After the Conservatives were elected in February 2006, CUPW also
focused its efforts on the new government.
Three key objectives
The union wrote to all members of Parliament and asked that they write to Prime Minister Stephen Harper
and Lawrence Cannon, Minister Responsible for Canada Post, urging that:
the moratorium on rural post office closures put into place by the Liberal government in 1994 be
continued and expanded to include urban offices;
the plan to close the Quebec City mail sorting plant be reviewed as promised by the Conservative Party
prior to the election;
all documents relating to Canada Post’s national network review and its overall plan for our public post
office be made available for a full and open debate.
Have we reached these objectives? An assessment follows.
1) Moratorium
The government has directed Canada Post to keep the moratorium on post office closures in rural and small
towns. CUPW will continue to put pressure on the government to expand the moratorium to include urban offices
and stop rural closures that have continued to happen despite the moratorium.
2) Plant closure in Quebec City
On June 12, Lawrence Cannon, the Minister Responsible for Canada Post told the House of Commons that the
government had decided to proceed with the closure. He said, "the members of Parliament and ministers
from the Quebec City area did fulfill their election promises by thoroughly reviewing and examining the
closure issue." He also said he had "obtained from Canada Post that no employee or manager will
lose their jobs and that the quality of mail delivery in that area will be improved."
CUPW will continue our efforts to stop the closure of the Quebec City mail processing plant and keep jobs
and service in Quebec.
CUPW has written to Minister Cannon to ask him for the information he obtained from Canada Post. The union
has asked him to explain how he determined that mail delivery would improve, given that the plant is not yet
fully closed.
As well, we have suggested that Minister Cannon work with the union, parliamentarians and others on an
independent assessment of mail delivery in Quebec City and Eastern Quebec if the plant is actually closed. We
want a new facility to process mail from Quebec City and Eastern Quebec once this assessment shows that
service is indeed suffering.
3) Canada Post's plans
Canada Post President Moya Green has refused to release the corporation's overall plans for our public
post office and its plans for the national network review. Ms. Greene says that she does not have a plan. She
says she is approaching facilities on a case-by-case basis.
CUPW has written to Ms. Greene to ask her if she has plans to review particular cases in the next two to
three years. We have asked her if she intends to respect CUPW's collective agreement to notify the union of
changes, such as closures, as far in advance as possible of changes. The corporation knew it would be closing
the Quebec City plant in February 2005. It did not notify the union until August 2005, nor did it engage in
meaningful consultation.
CUPW will continue to build on the success of Operation Transparency and our June 19 mobilization and will
keep trying to convince Canada Post to make its plans public.
As well, the union has asked Minister Cannon and Ms. Greene for information relating to the review that
the government is conducting of the financial and policy framework it uses for Canada Post. Changes to the
policy framework could undermine universal, public postal service as we know it.