Skip to content

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

  • Professional Subscription
  • Partnerships & Advertising
  • Licensing & Syndication
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
  • Business
  • Tech
  • National
  • The Big Read
  • Briefings
  • Commentary
Search
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
News

Voilà workers in Quebec reach deals with Sobeys after successful union push

With little notice outside their province, about 400 newly unionized Voilà workers in Quebec have ratified collective bargaining agreements, setting a precedent many of their counterparts in Ontario hope to follow.

News

Voilà workers in Quebec reach deals with Sobeys after successful union push

UFCW renewing efforts to organize Ontario employees of the online grocery service 

By Aleksandra Sagan
A Voilà delivery truck in Montreal. Photo: Empire Company/Handout
May 15, 2023
A A
A Small A Medium A Large
Share

Gift

Share

With little notice outside their province, about 400 newly unionized Voilà workers in Quebec have ratified collective bargaining agreements, setting a precedent many of their counterparts in Ontario hope to follow.

Workers at a Montreal fulfillment centre of Voilà, Sobeys’s online grocery delivery service, joined the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) in February 2022, while those at a “spoke” location in Quebec City followed suit in October. The provincial labour relations commission certified the bargaining units after majorities of workers at each location signed membership cards. In Quebec, no vote is required if more than 50 per cent of staff sign cards.

Talking Points

  • Voilà workers in Quebec who joined the United Food and Commercial Workers have reached collective agreements governing wages, seniority and other issues with Sobeys’s online grocery delivery service
  • The deals are a significant stride for unions trying to organize e-commerce workplaces in Canada—one the UFCW hopes to repeat with Voilà employees in Ontario

Workers who gather and prepare orders at the Montreal warehouse constitute one bargaining unit, while another comprises employees who do deliveries, said Nil Ataogul, the UFCW’s organizing coordinator in Quebec. A third unit is made up of delivery drivers who work out of the Quebec City site.

In January, the Montreal location’s 307 unionized workers signed new three-year collective bargaining agreements. In April, the Quebec City location, where the union estimates there are as many as 75 staff, did the same.

The certifications come amid renewed efforts to organize hundreds more Voilà workers in Ontario, where labour laws pose greater hurdles, but where employees of the service have contacted the UFCW in the past about pay and working conditions. More recently, the workers have raised concerns about what an upcoming merger of Voilà with Grocery Gateway means for them.

Sobeys launched Voilà in Toronto in June 2020, a few years after partnering with U.K.-based Ocado. Using Ocado’s technology, the grocer planned to build automated warehouses where robots do much of the picking and humans deliver the orders to customers. Sobeys opened its second fulfillment centre in Montreal in March 2022, with plans for others in Calgary and Vancouver. It has also opened three spoke locations—Etobicoke, Ont., Ottawa and Quebec City—to expand its delivery areas in those provinces. Sobeys did not respond to a request for comment. 

Related Articles

Voilà drivers consider joining union over pay, working conditions

By Aleksandra Sagan

Amazon has spent years fighting Ontario delivery drivers’ bid to form a union. Newly released documents reveal the company’s strategy

By Catherine McIntyre

Drivers have previously expressed concerns around their working conditions. In Ontario, UFCW has been working to unionize the ones at the Vaughan warehouse—Sobeys’s first—and the Etobicoke spoke location. Workers first reached out to UFCW at the end of 2021, expressing concerns about low pay as well as health, safety and workload.

The newly unionized Quebec staffers shared those complaints. They sought standardized pay on a scale that rises over time, said Ataogul, and had complaints about job stability and security. 

Their new collective agreements address these issues. In Montreal, warehouse workers will be hired at $18.20 an hour, while new delivery drivers will receive $19.20—both increases over previous rates. Union members will see their wages rise 60 cents for every 1,000 hours they work, meaning those working full time can receive two pay bumps annually. The contracts also include shift premiums and a new dental plan. 

The Quebec City agreement is very similar, said Ataogul. “They have a salary scale. They have a guaranteed evolution,” she said.

As for working conditions, the agreements call for the creation of a committee to address disputes rather than setting down specific requirements such as limits on the number of deliveries drivers can make in a day. “The whole point of having a collective agreement is to keep it as general as possible in order to basically have the right to intervene [for] whatever issues arise,” said Ataogul, noting these are fairly new operations and it’s not yet clear what all the problems are. 

“For the drivers, in particular, it’s a struggle right now and we don’t have anyone to fight for us.” 


Meanwhile, Voilà workers in Ontario have renewed their interest in joining UFCW, said Debora De Angelis, the union’s regional director for the province, amid concern that their future colleagues from Grocery Gateway are paid more than they are. “The workers have asked us to come back,” De Angelis said. “They’re quite angry, very angry.” 

Sobeys parent company Empire acquired the Grocery Gateway e-commerce service as part of its May 2021 acquisition of Ontario grocery store chain Longo’s. In Empire’s most recent earnings call, CEO Michael Medline announced Sobeys would combine Grocery Gateway in July with Voilà. In addition to their concerns about wage fairness, Voilà workers want clarity on how the merger will affect their seniority and flexibility when it comes to scheduling, De Angelis said.

“Loyal drivers like myself, for the first time with this company, are furious,” said an Ontario employee, whose identity The Logic is not revealing because the worker feared that speaking out could hurt their job prospects. It feels different than when the union first arrived, the person said, adding workers are “100 per cent” more likely to sign cards over fears around the upcoming Grocery Gateway merger.

The staffer who spoke to The Logic said most Voilà drivers make $21 an hour or less—a wage that, for this driver, leaves much of the food they deliver out of financial reach. The employee also cited health and safety concerns: at a time when demand for e-commerce is booming, Voilà has no per-order weight limit, and deliveries can involve lugging food up multiple flights of stairs. “For the drivers, in particular, it’s a struggle right now and we don’t have anyone to fight for us,” the source said.

Gift the full article

UFCW believes there are more than 200 workers at the Vaughan warehouse and about 100 in Etobicoke, and went back to both locations in April to canvas staff. It would need more than 40 per cent of workers at each location to sign cards to hold a unionization vote—a threshold De Angelis said is hard to hit as new drivers join and current staff quit. Unlike Quebec, Ontario requires a vote even if more than half the workers sign cards.

“We have the second hurdle that we need to jump in Ontario,” she said. “It makes unionization a lot harder, even if it’s the will of the workers.”

#e-commerce #Sobeys #unionization #United Food and Commercial Workers #Voilà

Loading...

Thanks for sharing!

You have shared 5 articles this month and reached the maximum amount of shares available.

Close
This account has reached its share limit.

If you would like to purchase a sharing license please contact The Logic support at [email protected].

Close
Want to share this article?

Upgrade to all-access now

Close
Gift the full article!

You have gifted 0 article(s) this month and have 5 remaining.

Copy link and gift
Copy Link
Email to a friend
Send Email
Gift on Social Media

Recipients will be able to read the full text of the article after submitting their email address. They will not have access to other articles or subscriber benefits.

Photo: Empire Company/Handout

Most Popular This Week

A man wearing a dark shirt is pictured against a brick wall. He is looking directly into the camera. with a serious facial expression.
The Big Read

How Sheldon McCormick brought Communitech back from the brink

By Catherine McIntyre
A skyscraper on Bay Street in Toronto, viewed from street level looking up, with a traffic light and street sign in the foreground against a blue sky with clouds.
Analysis

Canada’s AI hiring boom has reached Bay Street’s top executives

By Chaimae Chouiekh
A shot from above of five people clustered around a table, all working on near-identical laptop computers. Their computer bags lie on the floor and some are wearing yellow lanyards.
News

1 in 3 professionals are using unauthorized AI on the job, global survey finds

By Anita Balakrishnan
A head-on shot of James Neufeld seated with others at a round table in a meeting room. Eleanor Olszewski is seated to his left. There's a laptop open in front of Neufeld.
News

For this Alberta tech firm, ‘Buy Canadian’ isn’t working as advertised

By David Reevely

In-depth, agenda-setting reporting

Great journalism delivered straight to your inbox.

News

Canada joins the movement to make AI more open source

By Murad Hemmadi

Briefing

BoC consultation reveals distrust of inflation figures

By Kevin Carmichael   |   Jun 25, 2026 | 3:46 PM ET

Carney says developers did not ask for B.C. condo buyout plan

By Laura Osman   |   Jun 25, 2026 | 3:41 PM ET

BlackBerry raises its revenue outlook after beating performance expectations

By Catherine McIntyre   |   Jun 25, 2026 | 3:38 PM ET

Best business newsletter in Canada

Get up to speed in minutes with insights and analysis on the most important stories of the day, every weekday.

Exclusive events

See the bigger picture with reporters and industry experts in subscriber-exclusive events.

Membership in The Logic Council

Membership provides access to our popular Slack channel, participation in subscriber surveys and invitations to exclusive events with our journalists and special guests.

Recent Popular Stories

Analysis

It turns out Trump does need something from Canada—aluminum

By Joanna Smith   |   Jun 25, 2026
A close-up of a made-in-Canada stamp on the end of a cylindrical piece of raw aluminum.
Exclusive

Ssense has laid off photo and make-up teams and says AI will do much of their work

By Catherine McIntyre   |   Jun 22, 2026
News

Alberta to free up a huge amount of power to attract Big Tech and its data centres

By Meghan Potkins   |   Jun 24, 2026
A wide landscape shot of high-tension power lines over green and golden fields in rolling countryside.
News

Canada gets low returns from events like the World Cup. Ottawa wants to know why

By Laura Osman   |   Jun 19, 2026
A wide shot of the Vancouver skyline shot from the east, featuring the Science World geodesic dome painted as a FIFA 2026 World Cup soccer ball. B.C. Place stadium appears on the right side of the frame.
News

What makes a nuclear reactor Canadian? Billions of dollars ride on the answer

By David Reevely   |   Jun 23, 2026
A bowl-shaped structure surrounded by concrete barriers. A white sign with a blue Westinghouse logo is suspended across one side of the structure.
News

How a former Russian TV anchor ended up suing Canada’s go-to rocket company

By David Reevely   |   Jun 22, 2026
A shot across an expanse of low forest of a rocket launching into blue skies.

Canada's most influential executives and policymakers are reading The Logic

  • CPP Investments
  • Sun Life Financial
  • C100
  • Amazon
  • Telus
  • Mastercard
  • bdc
  • Shopify
  • Rogers
  • RBC
  • General Motors
  • MaRS
  • Government of Canada
  • Uber
  • Loblaw Companies Limited
logic-logo

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

100% human-crafted journalism

Newsroom

  • News Tips
  • AI Policy
  • Editorial Disclosures
  • Story Pitches

Company

  • About Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Statement
  • Corporate Information

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • FAQs
  • Work at The Logic

© 2026 The Logic Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Trusted by leaders

Error

Account creation failed.

Please email us at [email protected].

Create Account

[wppb-register form_name=”cozmo-registration-form-for-modal”]

I do have an account
Login
or

[wppb-login]

I don’t have an account