Higgs wants striking employees to be willing to discuss pension changes
CBC
Premier Blaine Higgs says talks with the Canadian Union of Public Employees could resume within days, but he wants to see the union more willing to talk about pensions.
Higgs and his government were pounded inside the legislature by opposition parties and outside by a large, noisy throng of striking CUPE members and supporters as the legislature reconvened for the first time since June.
The labour dispute dominated Question Period, with the Liberals and Greens pressing him to move quickly to make a deal.
"This is not a chicken dance," Opposition Liberal Leader Roger Melanson said, referring to the premier's onstage gyrations during New Brunswick Day celebrations in August. "This is serious."
Melanson accused the premier of dancing from position to position on the strike as well, threatening back-to-work legislation on the one hand while offering to talk on the other.
"It's confusing, all over the place, disoriented, disorganized," he said.
Higgs told reporters he is prepared to talk to CUPE.
"I'd be, certainly, be willing to do that," he said. "I'd expect that one way or the other there will be some discussions about next steps and that would be getting back to the table."
But he said if talks resume, "there's got to be an openness that it's because we're going to find a resolution, not because we spent two or three or four or five or six days on the picket line."
The government and the union have made competing wage proposals only one percentage point apart.
A key sticking point is the premier's push to add the CUPE local representing school bus drivers to the province's shared-risk pension plan, a regime that relieves the province of having to top up pension shortfalls with taxpayer dollars.
In return, Higgs is offering to bring 2,200 educational assistants into the plan, giving them a pension for the first time.
He is accusing CUPE of resisting the shift to shared-risk for the bus drivers because the national parent union has been fighting shared-risk plans Canada-wide.
But opposition leaders say it's Higgs who is being stubborn.