-

OCEU/CUPE 1750 Reaches Tentative Deal with WSIB After Historic Six-Week Strike

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--After more than six weeks on the picket lines and unprecedented solidarity across the province, members of the Ontario Compensation Employees Union (OCEU/CUPE 1750) have reached a tentative agreement with the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB).

“For six weeks, we stood strong on picket lines in every corner of Ontario. We made it clear: we won’t back down from protecting public services, demanding respect, and standing up for injured workers. This tentative deal reflects that strength.”

Share

“This has been one of the toughest fights in our union’s history—and I could not be prouder of our members,” said Harry Goslin, President of OCEU/CUPE 1750. “For six weeks, we stood strong on picket lines in every corner of Ontario. We made it clear: we won’t back down from protecting public services, demanding respect, and standing up for injured workers. This tentative deal reflects that strength.”

The tentative agreement follows weeks of stalled talks, growing public concern over WSIB service backlogs, and revelations that the Board had begun taking costly shortcuts in adjudication due to a mounting claims crisis. Frontline workers raised the alarm, broad support from the public, injured worker advocates, and elected officials.

“Our members were clear, they wanted real investments in frontline staffing, a stop to outsourcing Ontario jobs, and safer workloads. While we’ll be presenting the full details to our members first, I can say this, our bargaining team believes we’ve made meaningful progress on those priorities,” said Goslin.

OCEU/CUPE 1750 will be holding membership meetings in the coming days to present the terms of the tentative agreement, followed by a ratification vote. Until the vote is completed, no further details of the agreement will be made public.

Contacts

For more information, please contact:
Bill Chalupiak
CUPE Communications Representative
wchalupiak@cupe.ca
416-707-1401
mb/cope491

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information, please contact:
Bill Chalupiak
CUPE Communications Representative
wchalupiak@cupe.ca
416-707-1401
mb/cope491

More News From CUPE

Over 8,000 Albertans tell their health care horror stories

EDMONTON, AB--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A campaign calling for a “State of Emergency” in Alberta health care has received almost 25,000 signatures in three weeks on an online petition and over 8,000 stories and comments about the poor shape of the province’s health system. CUPE Alberta President Raj Uppal launched a new website (www.stateofemergency.ca/stories) today, publishing all of the 8,000 comments received by the union. “The response has been overwhelming and heartbreaking,” said Uppal. “Albertan...

Talks Between CUPE 3912 NSCAD workers Art College reach impasse

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Bargaining for a first collective agreement between the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) component of Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 3912 and NSCAD University has reached an impasse after conciliation talks failed late Tuesday night. The 133 academic workers at NSCAD organized with CUPE in 2023 and are now negotiating their first collective agreement. NSCAD workers are asking for a fair and equitable hiring procedure and meaningful job...

CUPE Long Term Care Workers Reach Impasse After Fourth Unchanged Offer from Employers

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Bargaining between long term care workers and their employers across Nova Scotia has reached an impasse after employers presented the same package for the fourth time without changes. The bargaining committee representing workers at 52 long term care homes across the province says the lack of movement is deeply concerning, particularly given the urgent recruitment and retention challenges facing the sector. Long term care workers in Nova Scotia are the lowest paid...
Back to Newsroom