Five things to know about the CN Rail strike
OTTAWA — The week-long strike of about 3,200 workers at the Canadian National Railway Co. is set to end after the Teamsters Canada union reached a tentative agreement with the company. The work stoppage had prompted an outcry from the agricultural sector, as well as politicians, demanding Ottawa end the impasse.
Here are five things to know about the freight rail industry in Canada, CN’s role in it, and why the strike was causing such alarm.
1) The industry runs from coast to coast to coast, but also reaches internationally
The rail system in Canada has 41,465 route-kilometres of track, reaching into every province and territory. Canadian National Railway Co., known as CN Rail, owns 52.8 per cent of the track with the next-largest owner being Canadian Pacific with 30.7 per cent. Other railways own the rest. While the rail companies move goods within Canada, rail is also how most of Canada’s products reach overseas markets — they are first carried by train to the nation’s ports.