ICBC Employees Vote to Accept Collective Agreement

Burnaby – The unionized employees at ICBC have voted to accept their newly bargained collective agreement. The members of the Canadian Office and Professional Employees Union, Local 378 (MoveUP) voted to accept the agreement by 71 per cent.

MoveUP first started serious negotiations with ICBC in the fall of 2011. It took over a year and several months of job action to reach a deal.   

“This was a hard won agreement,” said MoveUP President David Black. “In addition to the three strike days when our members walked picket lines, we took extensive internal job action including training and overtime bans, and restricted workloads.”

The agreement includes four staggered one per cent wage increases, with the first wage increase retroactive to July 1, 2012, maternity and parental top-up leave, and the promise of a workload study – ICBC’s first workload study in nearly 20 years.

“This is a foundational agreement,” said Black. “We wanted stronger workload protections–our members are struggling under crushing workloads which can impact the services the public receives. But with this agreement their wages won’t fall further behind inflation, and we can start to fix the workload problem.”

The freshly ratified four year agreement covers approximately 4,600 employees at ICBC. The term of the agreement is from July 1, 2010 to June 30, 2014. ICBC’s board will vote on the agreement on December 6.

-30-

Media contact: Jarrah Hodge, jhodge@moveuptogether.ca

image of a baby chimpanzee clutching a bamboo, with a cartoon box of crayons and the word "contest" overlaid above it
MoveUP Summer Colouring Contest with an environmental twist
Kermode Bear among trees in the Great Bear Rainforest in BC
Rainforest Day – June 22: A Call to Action for Workers and Unions
Bee on top of a yellow flower with purple petals
Protecting Pollinators: A Collective Effort for a Sustainable Future