Unifor May 1, 2021

TORONTO – More than 470 workers went on strike at a Nestlé Canada manufacturing plant in Toronto at midnight Saturday after contract negotiations between Unifor Local 252 and the chocolate company broke down.

“It’s a sad state of affairs,” said Eamonn Clarke, President of Unifor Local 252. “We’ve opened the door to precarious work and the company has taken advantage of it, using it to line their own pockets, make more profits and they don’t want to share anything with the workers.”

The workers, who manufacture Kit Kat, Aero, Coffee Crisp and Smarties, have been in a legal strike position since midnight on April 30.

Clarke said a few contracts ago, the committee worked to get the contract workers – roughly 80 of them – made permanent on temporary basis.

Nestle agreed every year to take 10 more of them and move them up to a P1 status, which would make them permanent and entitled to benefits.

“Full-time work should mean a full-time job,” said Jerry Dias, Unifor National President. “Precarious work, and specifically the use of temporary workers in a permanent full-time capacity, is a growing problem.

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