B.C. nurses will pause picket-line job action as mediated contract talks begin, a move the union said is intended to give negotiations the best chance of succeeding while allowing nurses to return their focus to caring for patients.
The B.C. Nurses’ Union said mediation between the Nurses’ Bargaining Association and the Health Employers Association of B.C. is now underway. Picket-line job action will pause at the end of the day Tuesday, July 14, while a provincewide ban on non-nursing duties and restrictions on overtime remain in place.
For nurses, the pause means a temporary shift away from visible job action, but not from the issues that prompted the dispute. The union said its bargaining priorities continue to include safe staffing, safer workplaces, manageable workloads and fair compensation, arguing those changes are essential to retaining nurses and strengthening patient care.
“Our bargaining committee is dedicated to engaging in a productive process and working toward an agreement that addresses the issues nurses have been raising for months: safe staffing, safer workplaces, manageable workloads and fair compensation,” BCNU President Adriane Gear said. “While there is still significant work ahead, we believe mediation offers an important opportunity to move these negotiations forward.”
The union said patients and communities stand to benefit if mediation leads to improvements that help recruit and retain nurses, reduce workload pressures and support a more sustainable public health-care system.
Since job action began, nurses across British Columbia have remained united in pressing for changes they say will improve both working conditions and patient care.
“The solidarity shown by B.C.’s nurses has been extraordinary,” Gear said. “They have come together with the goal of building a stronger health-care system. We are incredibly grateful for their commitment, their professionalism and their resolve. Nurses never wanted to be on picket lines – they want to be at the bedside, caring for patients.”
BCNU Chief Executive Officer and Nurses’ Bargaining Association chief negotiator Jim Gould said the union is approaching mediation in good faith while remaining prepared to resume further job action if necessary.
“We are entering mediation in good faith because we believe it presents an important opportunity to make meaningful progress at the bargaining table,” Gould said. “While we are pausing picket lines to support this process, our resolve has not changed, and we remain prepared to take whatever steps are necessary to achieve the contract B.C.’s nurses deserve.”





