
Wolfe Island Ferry workers say they aren’t at fault for staffing shortages
Global News
OPSEU Local 428 president says wages and benefits aren't competitive with the private sector, making employee retention and attracting new staff difficult.
Frontenac Islands Mayor Judy Greenwood-Speers could only express frustration and concern after the latest disruption in service, which shut down access to and from Wolfe island for 13 hours overnight Sunday into Monday.
“It is not working. It’s costing us business, economic development, tourism,” Greenwood-Speers said.
Tweets from the Ontario Ministry of Transportation blamed a staffing shortage — something president of OPSEU local 428, Jody Pringle, says is an ongoing problem because of pay
“We need to up the wages to try and keep people,” Pringle said.
He represents ferry workers for the Wolfe island, Amherst and Glenora ferries. He says wages and benefits are not competitive with the private sector where workers can make as much as $850 a day.
“We’re not looking to get $850 a day, we’re just looking to find something in between there that works for both sides to retain people.”
Pringle says mental health is a growing issue for workers as well and may be contributing to absences, adding that ferry staff are bearing the brunt of peoples’ frustration over the ferry disruptions.
“Peoples’ lives are being threatened. You know, people say, ‘I’m going to shoot you, I’m going to stab you.’ They’re being heckled, screamed at, given the finger on a daily basis.”