A majority of CUPE workers have voted in favour of accepting the tentative agreement with the provincial government.
Over 41,000 members (about 76% of the union) cast ballots from Nov. 24 to Dec. 5, with 73% voting in favour of accepting the deal.
The new deal offered a $1 flat rate hourly wage increase, which amounts to about 3.59% annually.
The deal was reached after a weekend of bargaining ahead of the second five-day strike notice filed by CUPE.
The first time members went to the picket line was to protest the Ontario government’s use of the notwithstanding clause to force a contract on workers.
President of CUPE’s Ontario School Boards Council of Unions Laura Walton says this is the first deal in 10 years that they’ve freely bargained.
OSBCU 2022 Bargaining Update # 48| Négociation du CSCSO 2022 – Mise à jour no 48 -Ratfication Vote Results #WorkerVoice #WorkerPowerDoesntEnd #OnPoli #OntEd https://t.co/ipKIoxnW5L pic.twitter.com/TXRjB6VQ6b
— OSBCU-CSCSO (@osbcucscso) December 5, 2022