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Coca-Cola Canada seeks court order to end striking workers’ ‘illegal blockade’

Coca-Cola strike Brampton
A restored Coca-Cola sign is displayed on a building along Old Route 66 Monday, Oct. 17, 2011 in Springfield, Ill. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman). Seth Perlman / AP Photo

TORONTO – Coca-Cola Refreshments Canada is seeking a court order to stop what it calls an “illegal blockade” by striking workers at some of their southern Ontario distribution centres.

About 700 workers at the company’s largest Canadian bottling facility in Brampton, Ont., went on strike on June 27 after talks with the Canadian Auto Workers Union broke down.

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Pension benefits and outsourcing are the major issues in the dispute.

Workers have set up picket lines at the Brampton facility, the company’s head office in Toronto and five distribution facilities in Toronto, Kingston, London, Hamilton and Barrie.

Coca-Cola says picket lines have prevented their products from leaving some distribution facilities.

A union representative says they are not aware of any physical blockades at the distribution centres but that there are “verbal agreements” with site managers on how many trucks can move in and out of the facilities.

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