Canada Post, CUPW given 90 days to settle rural, urban pay equity dispute
OTTAWA — Canada Post and its biggest union have been given until the end of August to reach an agreement in a long-standing pay equity dispute that could end up costing the post office millions of dollars.
After hearings that spanned four months this year, arbitrator Maureen Flynn on Thursday gave the Crown agency and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers 90 days to negotiate a settlement in the complicated dispute, which is rooted in perceived pay inequities between mostly male urban carriers and their majority female rural and suburban counterparts.
If no settlement is reached by Aug. 31, the case could go back to arbitration in the fall for a final determination, Flynn said in her 176-page decision.
But the union is already hailing the ruling as a “historic” victory for women because Flynn’s report rejected how Canada Post calculates compensation rates for it rural workers, known as RSMCs.


