Or maybe people should always have access to necessary medication and going on strike shouldn't change that? Just a thought
Ideally, this should be the case. I'd love it if they'd delivered this month's statement and health care card, and I'm hoping I don't get into a situation where I'd need to show that to prove that I'm entitled to certain medical benefits. However, this couple voted to strike, which is causing problems for a lot of other people as well - some of whom are at risk of eviction because they can't pay their rent and utilities without the cheques that aren't being delivered.
If they agreed to deliver the federal benefit cheques, they should also deliver the provincial benefit cheques.
There are some private citizens who have decided to become independent delivery people, delivering Christmas cards and parcels, letters, and various other things. Of course the strikers are angry about that, and disingenuously carrying on about "what if they get hurt? What training do they have? Oh, this is so horrible!"
As someone pointed out in the comment section of some social media/news site I read a few days ago (have been quite a few, so I don't recall offhand where it was), if a 13-year-old can deliver flyers, newspapers, and Christmas catalogues without special training, an adult should be able to slip a letter into a mailbox.
They do have a point about the safety issues. Canada Post won't deliver to an address where the sidewalk/porch are covered in ice or snow, but on the flip side, some of them demand that the sidewalk have no one speck of snow on it. Of course this is residential.
Uh-huh. Why don't they refuse to deliver to business and government addresses downtown, where there are whole blocks where NOBODY shovels the snow or chips the ice?