Amazon to close Quebec facilities, insists it's not because of new union
CBC
Amazon announced on Wednesday it will shutter its facilities in Quebec in the coming weeks and cut more than 1,700 jobs.
A company spokesperson said Amazon will outsource deliveries to smaller contractors. The spokesperson insisted that the decision was tied to cost savings — not the recent unionization of about 200 employees at a Laval, Que., warehouse.
"Following a recent review of our Quebec operations," the spokesperson said in an emailed statement, "we found that returning to a third-party delivery model supported by local small businesses, similar to the one we had until 2020, will enable us to offer the same excellent service and deliver even greater savings to our customers in the long term."
It was not immediately clear when Amazon would close its facilities, but the spokesperson told Radio-Canada it would happen in the "next two months."
Quebec is home to Amazon's only unionized workforce in Canada. Workers in Laval unionized last year, saying they were dissatisfied with what they described as a hectic work pace, low wages and inadequate health and safety measures.
At a recent demonstration, the workers said they were demanding $26 per hour, a $6-pay increase.
Amazon had said it was negotiating with the workers, but they had not yet reached a collective agreement.
The company opened its first facility in Quebec in 2020 in the borough of Lachine. It now has seven sites in Quebec, including sorting centres and warehouses. Most of them are in the Montreal area. One is in Coteau-du-Lac, about 60 kilometres west of the city.
On Wednesday morning, workers at the facility in Lachine expressed shock and disappointment after learning of the company's decision.
"Nobody saw this coming," one worker said. "No idea what I'm going to do. I need time to digest this."
The spokesperson said the scaling back of its Quebec operations would result in the closure of all seven of its sites.
Employees will be given as much as 14 weeks salary in severance, the company said.
Amazon became a $2 trillion company last year. It has facilities and thousands of employees across Canada.
Burlington MP Karina Gould gets boost from local young people after entering Liberal leadership race
A day after entering the Liberal leadership race, Burlington, Ont., MP and government House leader Karina Gould was cheered at a campaign launch party by local residents — including young people expressing hope the 37-year-old politician will represent their voices.
Two years after Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly declared she was taking the unprecedented step of moving to confiscate millions of dollars from a sanctioned Russian oligarch with assets in Canada, the government has not actually begun the court process to forfeit the money, let alone to hand it over to Ukrainian reconstruction — and it may never happen.