Gateway Casinos strike ends after five months

It took almost four months, but a workers’ union with ties to Gateway Casinos in Canada has finally scored a victory. The union had been on strike for the past 19 weeks, holding out for better wages and improved working conditions. A number of attempts to reach an agreement – the most recent of which was in September – failed, but it appears that Gateway has finally relented.

Announcement that a new deal had been worked out was first reported last week. The details were kept secret, pending a vote by the 700-plus workers that were walking the picket lines at Gateway casinos in Vernon, Kelowna, Kamloops and Penticton. The terms of the agreement were approved – albeit by a very close margin – and will see a new four-year deal with an average wage increase of 23.5% over the life of the contract. Additionally, there will be improved benefits offered, in particular to part-time employees.

The latest agreement almost didn’t survive the vote. Only 50.7% voted in favor of the new agreement, with some employees believing that they were being disrespected by Gateway.

Stephanie Smith, the president of the British Columbia Government and Service Employees’ Union (BCGEU), said in a press release following the deal’s approval, “I am so impressed by the solidarity and courage of our members. They should be proud of what they achieved by sticking together throughout the bargaining process, especially over the past 19 weeks on the picket line.”