Decision on UPM Miramichi mills within weeks: union leaders
Last Updated: Thursday, September 13, 2007 | 10:59 AM AT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Union leaders say hundreds of laid-off Miramichi millworkers should know their fate by Christmas.
Union representatives from UPM's groundwood and paper mills in Miramichi met with UPM officials in New York City on Wednesday to get an update on the Finnish paper company's plans for the mills.
UPM announced last month that it was temporarily shutting down the Miramichi mills, putting 600 people out of work.
After Wednesday's meeting, Communications, Energy and Paperwokers Local 689 president Chris Allison, who represents workers at the paper mill, said the company promised to make a decision on the mill's future within weeks, likely before Christmas.
"There's a lot of people back home are hinging on whether this mill starts or not and their lives and their families are waiting for an answer and everyone is sitting around waiting," he said. "I think it's only fair that a decision is rendered one way or the other."
Cecil Miller, president of CEP Local 678 at the groundwood mill, said workers should see the result of Wednesday's meeting as positive.
"I think that [workers are] going to find out a little sooner than they expected to, maybe, and that's a good thing either way because at least if it's bad news they'll be able to get on with their lives, and if it's good news, then let's go."
The union leaders say the company told them it wants to make the mill viable.
They say UPM is now doing feasibility studies to see if new infrastructure could make that happen.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- 'Unauthorized' pension change to be reversed
- Saint John's outgoing deputy mayor says an "unauthorized change" to the city's pension plan that would have benefitted the city's top earners if they retired early will be reversed. more »
- Fredericton invites citizens to weigh-in on new bylaw
- The City of Fredericton is inviting citizens to have their say on the municipality's new zoning bylaw. more »
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- Human Resources Minister Diane Finley announced details this morning about the government's planned changes to employment insurance that would tighten the rules for Canadians collecting the benefit. more »
- 8 views on EI changes: 'political football' or 'eHarmony'?
- Human Resources Minister Diane Finley released more details of the government's plans for reforming employment insurance Thursday. Here's a sample of the reaction. more »
Top News Headlines
- Quebec faces mounting pressure amid student crisis
- The morning after nearly 700 people were arrested in protests in Montreal and Quebec City, Jean Charest announced he has replaced his top aide with his former right-hand man. more »
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed
- The Conservative Party has filed a second motion to dismiss the robocalls lawsuits filed by the left-leaning Council of Canadians, calling council chairperson Maude Barlow a 'virulent critic' of Prime Minister Stephen Harper who has 'orchestrated' the litigation. more »
- Suspect arrested in decades old N.Y. missing boy case
- A man has been arrested in the 1979 disappearance of a six-year-old New York City boy, in the first arrest ever made in a case that helped give rise to the nation's missing-children movement. more »
- Double-lung recipient Hélène Campbell dances for joy
- The Ottawa woman who has become Canada's best-known advocate for organ donation was happy, smiling and in great spirits today as she described her new life less than two months after receiving a double-lung transplant. more »
- Man dies after assault at house party
- 'Unauthorized' pension change to be reversed
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- 300 litres of heavy water spilled at Point Lepreau
- Saint John managers ‘duped’ council, says deputy mayor
- Scrap metal plant sparks noise complaints
- Moose on the loose shot in Fredericton
- Food safety course necessary, trainer says
- Plastic bag fees should be legislated, council says

