Unifor head Jerry Dias ‘glad to be in the middle of it’ on NAFTA talks
OTTAWA — Just hours before Bombardier Inc. was to unveil a dramatic plan to escape its latest crisis, Jerry Dias was summoned to Montreal to meet with Alain Bellemare, the beleaguered firm’s chief executive.
There, the head of Canada’s largest private-sector union was told that after months of searching for partners to help finance its sleek new C Series jet, Bombardier would be teaming up with European manufacturer Airbus, which would take on much of the responsibility for building and selling the aircraft.
The deal would give Bombardier a way around the sky-high U.S. tariff prompted by a complaint from American rival Boeing. But it also put Dias — national president of Unifor, a union that represents more than 315,000 Canadian workers, many of them at both companies — in a tight spot.
It is not unusual for a big business to let big labour know about a big deal, but that would be especially important when it involves Dias, who is not afraid to make a lot of noise on issues — be they corporate or political — that matter to his membership.