THE Canadian Pacific Railway
faces an imminent strike by 4,800 employees over pension reform brought in by
the company's new interim CEO whose appointment has resulted from a fierce
proxy battle, reports the Toronto Globe and Mail.
The strike is over the
appointment of new management following weeks of board-level battling between
the old board and a major shareholder Bill Ackman, of New York's Pershing
Square Capital Management, who successfully removed the old CEO Fred Green,
replacing him with railway industry veteran Stephen Tobias as caretaker CEO.
The Teamsters Canada union
ended its five-year contract on December 30, and now worried that Calgary-based
CP will place new employees on less generous pensions in an effort to turn
around underperforming freight operations.
Said CP chief operations
officer Mike Franczak: "The offer on pension aligns with the industry and
allows the railway to remain competitive as we invest in strategic
infrastructure upgrades along our network."
Mr Franczak said the offer
is fair. "We are willing to enter into binding arbitration or negotiation
period extensions should an agreement not be reached at this stage," he
said.
"This would ensure the
continued operations of freight and commuter trains on CP's Canadian network
for the benefit of our customers. Any extension to the bargaining process
requires consent of the union or action of the federal government," he
said.
Mr Ackman, 46, is CP's
largest shareholder with a 14.2-per-cent stake. He and six other Pershing
Square nominees now serve on CP's new board. Pershing Square is touting its
recovery plan to chop CP's annualised operating ratio to 65 per cent within
four years of replacing Mr Green.
Source : HKSG, 22.05.12.
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