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Health-care unions reach deal

More than 46,000 British Columbia health-care workers could be getting a wage boost after their bargaining teams and provincial employers reached a tentative agreement.

More than 46,000 British Columbia health-care workers could be getting a wage boost after their bargaining teams and provincial employers reached a tentative agreement.

The multi-union Facilities Bargaining Association says it has reached a two-year proposed settlement after nine months of "difficult" negotiations.

Early this month, the workers representing 11 unions voted 96 per cent in favour of a strike.

At the time, spokeswoman Bonnie Pearson said the employers were looking for a savings of 25 per cent around benefits, a key sticking point.

Instead, the tentative agreement includes a continuation of benefits, along with an across-the-board wage hike of three per cent and a moratorium on layoffs resulting from contracting out.

"The [association] unions have worked hard to ensure that this tentative settlement honours our members' priorities in a large and diverse bargaining unit," Pearson said Sunday in a statement.

The association represents workers in publicly funded hospitals, long-term care facilities, emergency health services and health authority corporate offices.

Most are members of the Hospital Employees Union, but some are also represented by the B.C.

Government and Service Employees Union, the B.C. Nurses' Union and the Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 873.

Information and ratification meetings will be conducted by the unions in the next few weeks.

Negotiations began in February, while the current contract expired on March 31.