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Canada Post employees hold a 'die-in' during a rally outside the main post office in Vancouver, B.C., on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Darryl Dyck / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked-out Canada Post employees return to work at the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked out Canada Post employees picket outside the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A locked out Canada Post employee talks with a police officer outside the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked out Canada Post employees gather outside the Gateway sorting plant in Mississauga, Ont., Monday, June 27, 2011. Locked out Canada Post employees gather outside the Gateway sorting plant in Mississauga, Ont., Monday, June 27, 2011.

Angry postal workers rally before returning to work

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CTV News Video

CTV Toronto: Canada Post employees back to work
Zuraidah Alman reports on Canada Post employees, on their first day on the job since the government legislated them back to work.
CTV National News: Genevieve Beauchemin
After nearly a month of disruption, mail will finally start moving across Canada again Tuesday, but you may not get a smile from those delivering it.
CTV British Columbia: Bhinder Sajan on the protest
Postal workers are heading back to work, but hard feelings could take much longer to clear away. Many postal workers put forth a fight to demonstrate their disagreement.
CTV Edmonton: Susan Amerongen reports
After a long debate in Ottawa, newly passed legislation will force postal workers to return to work. Canadians should expect to see letters in their mailboxes as early as Tuesday.
CTV Calgary: Sue French on the postal workers
A special session in Ottawa over the weekend passed back to work legislation that forced striking Canada Post workers back to the job. The legislation to end the lockout imposed a smaller wage increase than Canada Post was offering during initial negotiations.
CTV Regina: Nelson Bird on mail service
A number of businesses and charities have been impacted by the work stoppage at Canada Post. There will be a lot of catching up to do when postal workers resume working on Tuesday.
CTV Montreal: Caroline van Vlaardingen reports
After a long debate in Ottawa, newly passed legislation will force postal workers to return to work. Canadians should expect to see letters in their mailboxes as early as Tuesday.
CTV News Channel: Jeff Callaghan, CUPW
The national director of the CUPW says the labour movement and CUPW is strong as ever to fight back and just because members are heading back to work it doesn't meant the fight is over.
CTV News Channel: Denis Lemelin, CUPW
The president of the CUPW says members are going back to work, but will continue to fight. He says members will look at every aspect of the legislation and try to challenge the arbitration.
CTV News Channel: Don Martin, Power Play host
The host of CTV's Power Play says it was politically popular for the Tories to force Canada Post employees back to work, but they have also brought the party more difficulty in certain parts of the public sector.
CTV News Channel: Jon Hamilton, Canada Post
A spokesperson for Canada Post apologizes for the work disruption and says employees will work as quickly as possible to process mail. He explains how employee relations will be improved despite lingering bitter feelings over the strike.
CTV National News: Richard Madan on the bill
Legislation ending Canada's postal shutdown is now the law of the land, as the bill was rushed through the Senate.

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Canada Post employees hold a 'die-in' during a rally outside the main post office in Vancouver, B.C., on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Darryl Dyck / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked-out Canada Post employees return to work at the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked out Canada Post employees picket outside the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A locked out Canada Post employee talks with a police officer outside the main postal facility in Halifax on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Locked out Canada Post employees gather outside the Gateway sorting plant in Mississauga, Ont., Monday, June 27, 2011. Locked out Canada Post employees gather outside the Gateway sorting plant in Mississauga, Ont., Monday, June 27, 2011.

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Canada Post employees hold a 'die-in' during a rally outside the main post office in Vancouver, B.C., on Monday, June 27, 2011. (Darryl Dyck / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Mon. Jun. 27 2011 10:27 PM ET

Thousands of frustrated Canada Post employees went back to work Monday, but not before staging protests across the country to vent their frustration at Ottawa's handling of labour unrest at the Crown corporation.

Unionized Canada Post employees and other labour groups held a noisy rally in downtown Vancouver Monday, with many carrying placards emblazoned with messages criticizing the Conservative government.

"They made it clear that they don't really care about our wellbeing," said CUPW member Mike Palesek. "And we'll return the favour."

Under the terms of federal legislation passed on Parliament Hill over the weekend, Canada Post had to end its lockout and 48,000 urban postal workers had to return to work by 8:45 p.m. ET Monday.

Officials with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers said their members would abide by the legislation. But they did not go cheerfully.

There was a brief confrontation at a sorting plant in Halifax Monday morning when about 100 unionized workers, upset at the federal legislation, turned away managers as they tried to enter the building. Police were called in and the managers were eventually allowed in at 4 p.m. local time.

In St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, workers held a rally outside a Canada Post building before heading back to their jobs Monday afternoon.

In his address to the crowd, the NDP MP for St. John's South-Mount Pearl, criticized Ottawa's handling of the labour dispute.

"You cannot go for billions of dollars of cuts and savings from the workers of this country," Ryan Cleary told the crowd. "The next Conservative action plan cannot be your pension."

Canada Post employees in Edmonton also held a protest before resuming their duties, while their counterparts in Calgary continued to march on the picket lines until late Monday afternoon.

The back-to-work legislation forces postal workers to accept wages that are less than what Canada Post had last offered. It will dictate non-wage issues by choosing between a final offer from both Canada Post and the union.

"It's all favoured towards Canada Post management and it's not going to be good for us," said George Floresco, third national vice-president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.

Mail delivery could begin to resume as early as Tuesday, although Canada Post officials said it may take quite a while for service to get back to normal.

The Crown corporation began unsealing mailboxes Monday in preparation for resuming service. Post offices are also set to reopen Tuesday, with mail already in the system taking priority over newly mailed items.

Union vows not to forget

Meanwhile CUPW says it won't soon forget what it calls the Conservative government's "anti-labour" actions.

Jeff Callaghan, national director for the union's Atlantic region for the union, said his members are keen to return to their routes but plan to protest Conservative MPs who voted to force them back to work.

"What we're going to be doing over the summer months is visiting the Tory MPs who were quite quick to take away our rights," Callaghan told CTV News Channel on Monday afternoon. "Some of the discussions in the (House of) Commons referred to (postal workers) as less than Canadian."

Urban postal workers began a series of rotating strikes on June 3, after failing to come to a contract agreement with Canada Post. Wages for new employees, sick days and the company's plan for the future were among the sticking points between the Crown corporation and its employees.

In the early days of the rotating strikes, the post office and the union remained engaged in negotiations. But the two sides didn't get very far and Canada Post announced June 14 that it was locking out its striking workers.

A day later, Labour Minister Lisa Raitt signalled that the government would table back-to-work legislation if the two sides couldn't reach a deal. The bill was tabled on June 20 and led the opposition New Democrats to hold a days-long filibuster -- a non-stop debate in the House of Commons -- to hold up passage of the back-to-work bill for 58 hours.

But they could only stall the bill for so long and it passed, was approved by the Senate and received royal assent during the same weekend.

Canada Post spokesperson Jon Hamilton said postal workers will begin sorting through the mail that has accumulated during the strike and accompanying lockout when they return to work on Monday.

"What we're going to do is move as quickly as possible to get the mail restored across Canada," Hamilton said Monday morning.

Once sorting begins, he said postal workers will be able to begin distributing the mail as soon as Tuesday afternoon.

Denis Lemelin, the president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, has said union members will obey the back-to-work order from the government.

But he said CUPW will examine the back-to-work legislation that passed Sunday to see if it has any holes to exploit -- and the union will also take an aggressive stance during the upcoming arbitration process.

"The message of the government is the fact that if people want to stand up for their rights, they will legislate you back, and they will impose the wages," he told CTV News Channel on Monday. "It's a signal to all the people in the federal public sector (that) if they don't like the wages and they go on strike, they will be legislated back."

Callaghan says he knows some Canadians might see his union's demands as somewhat lofty in an era of cutbacks and economic uncertainty. But he says they didn't come out of thin air.

"What Canadians should remember is that what we have in our collective agreements has been fought for… since the 1960s," he said. "This wasn't all given to us."

With reports from CTV Vancouver's Bhinder Sajan, NTV's Pam Parsons and files from The Canadian Press

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