Western and CUPE reach tentative agreement, members to vote Friday
Maintenance staff, caretakers and trade workers - all members of CUPE Local 2361 - hit the picket lines at Western University on August 30.
They walked off the job demanding more pay and more staffing.
Stating that their buildings have become extremely messy, students on campus were pleased to hear that the strike may be coming to an end.
The absence of CUPE workers has caused many wrinkles for residents like elevators being out of operation on moving day, broken garbage chutes, and more.
That’s not to mention the disruption to commuters, with picket lines blocking traffic access, and London transit buses refusing to enter campus.
Details of the pending agreement are not being released at this time.
Union members will be voting on the tentative deal on Friday - if it's ratified they could be going back to work as early as October 17.
- with files from CTV News London's Nick Paparella
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
LIVE UPDATES Chrystia Freeland's resignation sends shockwaves through the Hill
Chrystia Freeland, Canada's finance minister, said in an explosive letter published Monday morning that she will quit cabinet. Follow along for live updates.
BREAKING Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland quits cabinet hours before economic update
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has announced she's resigning from cabinet. In a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau posted to social media, Freeland said this decision came after Trudeau offered her another position.
Canada Post says workers to return Tuesday after labour board ruling
Operations at Canada Post will resume at 8 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Dec. 17, the company said, after the Canada Industrial Relations Board ordered a return to work.
W5 Investigates Connecting the dots on a landlord scam: how clues revealed a prolific con artist at work
In part one of a three-part investigation, W5 correspondent Jon Woodward reveals how a convicted con artist bilked dozens of people in a landlord scam.
Travel risk: Which countries does Canada recommend avoiding?
Canadians planning to travel abroad over the holidays should take precautionary steps to ensure they're not unintentionally putting themselves in harm's way.
Liberal Housing Minister Sean Fraser says he won't seek re-election
Housing Minister Sean Fraser says he will not be running in the next federal election, citing family reasons.
BREAKING Jury delivers guilty verdicts for accused in Montreal-area triple homicide trial
The accused in a triple homicide trial south of Montreal has been found guilty.
Ford says Canada's premiers have a 'unified strategy' ahead of meeting on Trump tariffs
Two days after wishing his counterparts 'good luck' in addressing U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s threat of 25 per cent tariffs diplomatically, Ontario Premier Doug Ford now says Canada’s premiers are aligned in their approach.
Assad says he didn't plan to flee Syria, according to presidency Telegram account
Ousted Syrian President Bashar Assad's departure from the country was unplanned, according to a statement posted Monday on the Syrian Presidency Telegram account, purporting to be from Assad.