[1] In 1976, women working as clerks in the Bank of Nova Scotia and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce wished to unionize.
As a result, the union took them into membership, but the following year instead assisted them in forming the Canadian Union of Bank Employees.
[2] The union grew steadily, and by 1980, it had 7,214 members in 56 locals, led by Kenneth V.
[3] That year, it merged with the Canadian district of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union and some directly chartered local unions in Quebec, to form the Energy and Chemical Workers Union.
This article related to a Canadian trade union is a stub.