B.C. port shutdown could impact holiday shopping plans
A labour impasse that has shutdown trade at British Columbia ports could put a damper on holiday shopping plans if no resolution can be reached soon.
Thousands of containers filled with merchandise intended for stores across the country now sit stationary on docks or on cargo ships which are being diverted to other ports.
"For people whose delivery is very close to the sale of the goods, this will disrupt those business models very significantly,” said Greg Wilson, of the Retail Council of Canada.
Black Friday, the unofficial launch of the holiday shopping season, is just around the corner and Wilson says many small independent retailers rely on revenue from this time of year just to stay afloat.
"That's their Christmas inventory and it's delayed, and they can't sell it, and moreover, the increasing costs sometimes amounting to thousands of dollars a day, are costs that they have to bear,” Wilson said.
The BC Maritime Employers Association locked out about 700 foremen from ILWU Local 514 on Monday afternoon.
The move came in response to a strike notice issued by the union.
On the Vancouver Board of Trade website, a calculator estimates the value of disrupted trade in real time.
It goes up by $33 million per minute.
"Every minute that goes by is costing all of us. And it's either costing retailers and companies not being able to get the goods,” said VBOT president and CEO Bridgette Anderson. “Or in the end, the consequence is that the price of goods will go up and we'll all end up paying that."
The federal government has made mediators available but so far Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has given no indication he plans to step in and end the impasse.
"He has demonstrated a preference for negotiated settlements. I expect him to do that again,” said Hamish Telford, a political scientist at the University of the Fraser Valley. “Particularly with the NDP government here in British Columbia which would also have a preference for a negotiated settlement."
With nation-wide economic impacts rippling, that strategy may have a short shelf life.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Suspect shot after 'number of people' stabbed in downtown Vancouver: police
A 'number of people' were stabbed in downtown Vancouver Wednesday before a suspect was shot by police, authorities say.
DEVELOPING As police search for suspect, disturbing video surfaces after U.S. health-care CEO gunned down in New York
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed Wednesday morning in what investigators suspect was a targeted shooting outside a Manhattan hotel where the health insurer was holding an investor conference.
'Utterly absurd': Freeland rebuffs Poilievre's offer of two hours to present fall economic statement
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has rebuffed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's offer to give up two hours of scheduled opposition time next Monday to present the awaited fall economic statement as 'utterly absurd.'
Minister 'extremely concerned' after Air Canada announces change to carry-on bags
Air Canada plans to bar carry-on bags and impose a seat selection fee for its lowest-fare customers in the new year.
Canada's new public-sector payment system is still years away from being implemented
After half a decade of testing and an investment of nearly $300 million, the federal government is still years away from fully implementing its next-generation pay and human resource cloud platform to replace the problem-plagued Phoenix payroll system.
WATCH: Suspects armed with hammers hit Markham jewelry store
Six suspects are in custody in connection with a smash-and-grab robbery at a jewelry store in a Markham mall that was captured on video.
Why are some Canada Post outlets still open during CUPW strike?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
French government toppled in historic no-confidence vote
French opposition lawmakers brought the government down on Wednesday, throwing the European Union's second-biggest economic power deeper into a political crisis that threatens its capacity to legislate and rein in a massive budget deficit.
Woman who stowed away on plane to Paris is back on U.S. soil
A Russian woman who stowed away on a Delta Air Line flight from New York to Paris last week has returned stateside Wednesday.