Canadian workers who assemble Bombardier Inc`s turboprops and the company`s new top-of-the-line business jet on Saturday reached a tentative agreement with the company just hours ahead of a strike deadline, the union said.

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Unifor, the union representing the 1,600 workers, has previously said its members were looking for a three-year contract with greater job security on the company`s strong-selling Global 7500 business jet, among other demands.

A Bombardier spokesman confirmed that a tentative agreement has been reached. Union members are set vote on Sunday to ratify the agreement.

The long-range jet, which is to enter service this year, is a critical part of Bombardier`s strategy to grow business aircraft revenues to $8.5 billion in 2020, up from $5 billion in 2017.

Union workers at Bombardier`s Downsview plant in Canada`s largest city Toronto assemble several large-cabin business jets, along with the Q400 turboprops.

The union talks follow Bombardier`s May announcement that it had agreed to sell the sprawling Downsview site, the company’s largest land asset, to a Canadian pension fund for approximately $635 million. Bombardier will continue to operate from Downsview for a period of up to three years, with two optional one-year extension periods.

(This article has not been edited by Zeebiz editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)