Children’s aid workers in Ottawa ratify deal, end strike

Ottawa·Updated

A deal has been reached between Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa (CASO) workers and their employer that puts an end to a more than three-week strike, according to the union.

CASO workers went on strike July 8

A group of workers walk down a sidewalk holding signs and chanting.
Workers with the Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa began walking the picket lines on July 8. (Joseph Tunney/ CBC)

A deal has been reached between more than 300 Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa (CASO) workers and their employer that ends a more than three-week strike, according to the union.

Workers walked off the job July 8 after contract negotiations broke down over complaints about what the union called a chronic lack of funding.

The workers had been without a contract since the end of 2023. On Tuesday morning, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) posted that a tentative deal had been reached Monday night.

On Wednesday, it said the deal had been ratified.

During their strike, those who were on the picket line said their main priorities were securing pay increases that reflected the rising cost of living and protection from layoffs.

The union said that job protection was crucial in the wake of 20 planned job cuts — cuts it said would have had “catastrophic” consequences.

It didn’t share details of the deal, but said there could still be 38 full-time positions cut over its three years. It also said the system will continue to deteriorate unless there are province-wide improvements.

CASO has been operating with a more than $3 million deficit over the past couple years.

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story said a deal had been reached between striking workers and the province. Though the province funds and regulates the Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa as a non-profit, the negotiations were between the workers and the society.

    Jul 30, 2024 3:46 PM ET

With files from Jenna Legge and Isabel Harder

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