Members of the Canadian Auto Workers Union have voted in favour of a three-year labour agreement with Ford Canada, the union said Sunday.

"This agreement is a victory for our members," CAW President Buzz Hargrove said in a news release. "It takes care of current workers and retirees while recognizing the challenges facing the industry. And it doesn't do this on the backs of future workers either, with any sort of two-tier structure."

Workers in Ontario cities, including Oakville, Windsor and St. Thomas, voted over the weekend on the tentative agreement between Ford Canada and the CAW. Seventy-eight per cent voted in favour of the new collective deal over the weekend, the union said.

The agreement, which covers 8,900 workers at Ford's Canadian operations, was unanimously endorsed by the master bargaining committee and overwhelmingly supported by more than 200 local leaders who gathered in Toronto on Friday.

The Ford agreement comes more than four months before the current contract is due to expire.

Hargrove said Friday that the union will meet Monday with General Motors of Canada and with Chrysler Canada on Tuesday to "get bargaining going as quickly as possible."

The CAW typically reaches an agreement with one of the North American automakers and then uses that deal as a framework for deals with the other automakers where it has collective agreements.

With files from the Canadian Press