Unifor says Jamieson workers willing to sit outside on picket line for 'as long as it takes'

Striking Unifor Local 195 members hold up signs on the picket line at Jamieson Laboratories in Windsor. (Dalson Chen/CBC - image credit)
Striking Unifor Local 195 members hold up signs on the picket line at Jamieson Laboratories in Windsor. (Dalson Chen/CBC - image credit)

Emile Nabbout said the results of a ratification vote by union members who work for Jamieson Vitamins in Windsor, Ont., shows workers are willing to sit outside on the picket line for "as long as it takes."

The Unifor Local 195 president said the message from members was clear.

"They don't believe that the company came with all the money they feel they deserve," he told CBC News.

Unifor has said members' wages and workload were concerns in the bargaining process.

The sign at the Jamieson Vitamins production facility at 4025 Rhodes Dr. in Windsor.
The sign at the Jamieson Vitamins production facility at 4025 Rhodes Dr. in Windsor.

The sign at the Jamieson Vitamins production facility at 4025 Rhodes Dr. in Windsor. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

A tentative agreement was reached on Friday and endorsed by the national union and Local 195 bargaining committee.

However, during a Sunday ratification meeting the union said 76 per cent of the roughly 300 workers voted down the deal.

"Everybody went back to the picket line, and we'll see if the company is willing to step up to the plate and address those issues," said Nabbout.

Workers have been on strike since Feb. 1 at the company's Rhodes Drive facility in Windsor. They manufacture and package health supplements.

Nabbout said as of now he's unaware of the company's willingness to head back to the bargaining table.