March 17, 2006
(Letter sent to the editor of the National Post)
Dear Editor:
I would like to comment on the article entitled "Postal workers deliver ultimatum", that was published in the March 16 edition of your newspaper. The article reported on the Canadian Union of Postal Workers' (CUPW) announcement that they are launching an initiative called Operation Transparency and will resort to civil disobedience in the tradition of Mahatma Gandhi and the American civil rights movement to obtain information about Canada Post's plans for its future network.
Frankly, we are flabbergasted.
Canada Post employees make good wages, enjoy great benefits, iron-clad job security and a fully indexed pension plan. We are at a loss, then, to see how this threatened civil disobedience bears any comparison to the struggles of these great movements for social justice.
Here are the facts:
As a business, Canada Post must modernize and improve operations to stay competitive and successful. We owe it our shareholder, we owe it to our customers and we owe it to all Canadians. First and foremost, we owe it to our employees who are counting on our continued success to safeguard their job security, a fully indexed pension plan and highly-competitive compensation and benefits.
Sincerely,
Mary Traversy
Senior Vice-President
Employee Engagement
Canada Post