Canada Line tunnel workers exploited, say unions
Last Updated: Thursday, June 1, 2006 | 7:50 PM PT
CBC News
Related
Video
- Melanie Nagy reports for CBC TV's CanadaNow
play: RealMedia »
B.C.'s construction unions say dozens of foreign workers at the Canada Line rapid transit tunnel are the victims of exploitation, receiving less than the minimum wage.
The B.C. and Yukon Building and Construction Trades Council says more than 50 workers from Costa Rica, Peru and Colombia are working long hours with no overtime — which works out to a wage of less than $5 an hour.
"We feel that it's important enough that we put everybody on notice that this is absolutely unacceptable. This is scandalous," said the council's executive director, Wayne Peppard.
Wayne Peppard says the foreign workers are being paid less than $5 an hour. (CBC)
"We were shocked and appalled to learn that these atrocious wages are being paid to foreign workers here on this RAV line. This is an exploitation of the temporary foreign-worker program."
The council says it's also upset that Canadian union workers are not being used on the tunnel portion of the rapid transit line from downtown Vancouver to Richmond and the airport.
-
LINK:
Canada Line

Canada Line spokesman Steve Crombie says no B.C. companies bid on the tunnelling contract. It then went to international bidding, and Seli Tecnologie — an Italian company — won the contract.
The Canada Line tunnel boring will start from this excavation on the south side of False Creek. (CBC)
Crombie said Seli's employees are "experts in tunnel-boring work, and they have done these projects all over the world.
"And I think what's happening is the building trades are making accusations or suggestions because they're upset because they aren't doing the work."
Crombie also said the workers from Central and South America are being paid "competitive wages" — and specifically denied that the workers are being paid less than $5 an hour.
" I don't know how much they are being paid, but I can tell you it's certainly more than minimum," he said.
The Seli workers will be operating a specialized tunnel-boring machine 24 hours a day for the next two years to complete the five-kilometre tunnel under downtown Vancouver and False Creek by 2008.
The Canada Line is scheduled to open in 2009.
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- What kind of home can $380,588 buy?
- The national average price for a home rose to $380,588 in April 2013, an increase of 1.3 per cent from the previous year. But what can a house hunter expect to find for that price? more »
- Traffic circle accidents worry Kitsilano residents
- Residents along a popular biking lane along Vancouver's West 10th Avenue are concerned traffic circles are causing an increase in accidents between cars and cyclists. more »
- Harper to address Tory caucus amid Senate scandal
- Conservatives gathered Monday night to mourn the passing of a key architect in their rise to power — and to brace for the toughest test Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has faced since taking office on a promise to clean up politics in the national capital. more »
- B.C. man feared kidnapped in Mexico
- Family members of a 22-year-old B.C. man missing in Mexico are concerned he may have been kidnapped. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Oklahoma tornado recovery work begins after deadly storm
- Rescue teams searched through the night looking for survivors after a deadly tornado that flattened homes and two schools in an Oklahoma City suburb, and officials have now reduced the death toll from 51 to 24. WATCH LIVE: U.S. President Obama is scheduled to speak at 10 a.m. ET about the massive tornado.
more »
- Harper tells Tory caucus he is 'upset' by Senate scandal
- Prime Minister Stephen Harper will give a televised address to the Conservative caucus this morning and comment on the Senate expenses controversy that prompted the weekend resignation of his chief of staff, and forced senators Mike Duffy and Pam Wallin to step aside. more »
- Keith Boag: Have you heard about the murderous abortion doctor?
- The gruesome trial and murder conviction of Philadelphia abortion provider Dr. Kermit Gosnell is unlikely to change American abortion law, Keith Boag writes. But it has U.S. journalists questioning their priorities and how they cover such a sensitive issue. more »
- Fearful Oklahoma families search for children
- The parents and guardians stood in the muddy grass outside a suburban Oklahoma City church, listening intently as someone with a bullhorn called out the names of children who were being dropped off — survivors of Monday's deadly tornado. more »
- Baseball fuels dreams, desperation in Dominican Republic
- The Toronto Blue Jays have a number of stars from the Dominican Republic, but in the shadow of these successful players is an equally important story about hope and poverty, and a country desperately struggling to balance the two. more »
- B.C. man feared kidnapped in Mexico
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx
- Vancouver man attacked, killed in Costa Rica
- Vancouver link to Hadfield's space guitar
- Nanaimo Facebook group takes aim at thieves
- Petition looks to rename Victoria Day
- Bid to re-open Langley Speedway
- Public raising funds to buy alleged Rob Ford crack video
- East Vancouver residents in 'guerrilla gardening' campaign



