A 48-hour strike action halting the majority of buses in Metro Vancouver will end at 3:30 a.m. on Wednesday.
TransLink shared the news Tuesday afternoon that service will resume on Jan. 24, with full service expected by 5 a.m.
Strike action started on Monday morning when 180 bus supervisors walked off the job over wage discrepancy between other supervisors in the transit system.
Buses were pulled off routes and the SeaBus was shut down for 48 hours. CUPE Local 4500 and Coast Mountain Bus Company could not reach a deal.
During the shut down, many people could not get to medical appointments, students couldn’t attend classes and people were not able to get to their jobs.
SkyTrains were not impacted during the strike action and will be operating on Wednesday.
What’s next?
A stalemate continues with CUPE 4500 spokesperson Liam O’Neill saying if a deal is not reached there will be an "escalation."
The union representing striking bus supervisors in Metro Vancouver has scheduled a meeting to determine if members can picket outside SkyTrain stations.
Glacier Media has confirmed that the BC Labour Relations Board (BCLRB) will meet with CUPE Local 4500 on Monday, Jan. 29.
A TransLink spokesperson says the meeting is expected to take multiple days before a decision could be made. If the Labour Relations Board files in favour of CUPE 4500, then they would have the right to picket at SkyTrain locations.
It is unclear at this point which of Metro Vancouver’s three SkyTrain lines would be affected, as the Expo and Millennium Lines are operated by British Columbia Rapid Transit Company Ltd. and the Canada Line by ProTrans BC on behalf of TransLink; the scope and location of the picketing is up to the union to determine and the BCLRB to approve.