BCGEU Strike 2025: Thousands Rally at the B.C. Legislature as Job Action Enters Week Six

BCGEU strike 2025
BCGEU strike 2025 sees 10,000+ rally at the B.C. Legislature as talks stall. What’s at stake, who’s impacted, and what both sides say.

What happened at the Legislature

More than 10,000 striking public-service workers and supporters marched through downtown Victoria and filled the Legislature lawn on Oct. 6, 2025, the opening day of B.C.’s fall sitting. The rally capped six weeks of job action and followed the latest breakdown in talks between the province and the B.C. General Employees’ Union (BCGEU). Global News

BCGEU president Paul Finch told crowds the union wants the government back at the table with a “fair wage offer,” warning of rapid escalation if there’s no movement. BCGEU official release

External coverage:

Who is on strike and what’s affected

According to the union and media reports, nearly 22,000 workers have participated in job action to date, with 300+ worksites fully or partially impacted. Affected areas include BC Liquor and BC Cannabis retail, Liquor Distribution Branch warehouses, Commercial Vehicle Safety & Enforcement (CVSE) weigh scale stations, and various provincial ministries. Global News

Global News also reported disruptions to some StudentAid BC services amid the expanding job action. Global News

How we got here: timeline at a glance

  • Sept. 29, 2025: Resumed negotiations collapsed on day one, per the union.
  • Oct. 1–2: BCGEU escalated job action and pickets at additional sites.
  • Oct. 5: “Fund the Frontlines” march to the Legislature announced.
  • Oct. 6: 10,000+ rally in Victoria as fall session opens; union signals further escalation if talks don’t resume.

Additional local reporting (Vista/AM1150) said the BCGEU’s recent position included an 8% general wage increase over two years, while the province’s latest offer was ~4–5% over two years (disputed components), and referenced an updated $11.6B deficit shaping government stance. AM1150 recap with wage figures

What each side is saying

BCGEU:

Says wages and recruitment/retention in key public-service roles are core issues, and that the province must return to bargaining with a “reasonable” and clear general wage offer. BCGEU official stance

Frames the rally as a show of solidarity with 19,700+ striking public-service workers.

Province:

Premier’s office and ministers have argued they’ve increased wage offers versus earlier rounds, but must balance public finances and service delivery. (Global summarized the province touting an offer of “up to 5% over two years,” which the union disputes as not a true general wage increase.) Global News

Why the BCGEU strike 2025 matters for the public

  • Service access: Retail closures (liquor/cannabis), weigh scale operations and ministry functions may face delays or reduced capacity.
  • Costs & staffing: Prolonged disputes can strain overtime, backlogs, and hiring—especially in specialized roles represented by BCGEU and allied unions (e.g., PEA).
  • Policy stakes: The rally coincided with the first day of the fall session, putting public-sector bargaining—and the broader fiscal picture—front-and-center for MLAs.

What to watch next

  • Will talks resume? Both sides say they’re open to bargaining; the size of any general wage increase (vs. market adjustments) appears to be the sticking point.
  • Escalation risk: The union has signaled more worksites could join lines if there’s no progress.
  • Service impacts: Keep an eye on updated picket lists and any new ministry/retail advisories. (The BCGEU typically posts updates on its site.)

Related reading

Source list

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