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Collective bargaining deal reached in Quebec slaughterhouse labour dispute

The labour dispute at a slaughterhouse in St-Anselme, Que., has resulted in more than one million chickens being euthanized. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

A labour dispute at a slaughterhouse near Quebec City that resulted in more than one million chickens being euthanized has come to an end.

Workers at the Exceldor co-operative in St-Anselme, Que., voted 66 per cent in favour of a deal submitted by mediator-conciliators with the province’s Labour Ministry today.

More than 500 workers at the slaughterhouse have been without a contract since July 2020 and have been on strike since May 23, with salaries and working conditions emerging as key sticking points.

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The union also levelled allegations of a toxic work environment at the facility.

Mario Maisonneuve, the president of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, said in a statement on Saturday the new agreement will improve not only working conditions, but will also rectify wrongdoings allegedly perpetrated against members since 2013.

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Exceldor will reopen to its full capacity on Monday. The new collective agreement, which will be formally signed in July, will be effective for a period of six years and be retroactive to Aug. 1, 2020.

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