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The union representing workers at the closing Diageo Crown Royal plant in Amherstburg says it’s reached a final deal for its members who will be out of a job next February.

Members of Unifor Local 200 met Sunday to ratify the company’s final offer. That means the plant closure plan is irreversible, says John D’Agnolo, Local 200 president. The roughly 160 unionized workers there have the option to leave now, or stay until the plant closes.

Premier Doug Ford has said the provincial government will protest the closure by pulling Crown Royal off its shelves at the LCBO next year. The union urged the province to “fight like hell” to keep the plant open.

But D’Agnolo says he believes the closure was always a done deal.

“I think the decision was already made, to be quite frank with you,” he said.

WATCH | An Amherstburg restaurant takes Crown Royal off the menu:

Amherstburg restaurant boycotting Crown Royal, Diageo products

Gilligan’s Fire Grill is stopping all its orders of Diageo products, including Crown Royal whisky, and changing its menu after the company announced it was shuttering its Amherstburg bottling plant.

“We were hoping with the loss of sales that they’d look at it different, and they did not … They had made their mind up and they were not changing it.”

For its part, the company said Crown Royal whisky will continue to be mashed, distilled and aged in Canada, but the move was an effort to shift “some bottling volume to be closer to its many U.S. Crown Royal consumers.”

“Diageo will maintain its significant footprint across Canada, including at our Canadian headquarters and warehouse operations in the Greater Toronto Area and other bottling and distillation facilities in Gimli, Manitoba and Valleyfield, Quebec,” the company said earlier this year.

WATCH | Premier Doug Ford pours out a bottle of Crown Royal:

Doug Ford pours Crown Royal on ground, vows to ‘hurt’ Diageo for plant closure

The Premier of Ontario expressed his anger for the multinational corporation Diageo by dumping a bottle full of Crown Royal whisky. Doug Ford called for consumers to do the same in response to the company deciding to permanently close its bottling plant in Amherstburg. Meanwhile, the plant’s workers gathered in Windsor to discuss their uncertain future. CBC’s Dalson Chen reports.

D’Agnolo says the closure deal was as good as it could be under the circumstances. Closure negotiations are tender because the company can always walk away, leaving its workers with only the minimum required by the government.

“You’re in a position where you have to do what you can to get as much as you can for the members,” he said. “After the (Dec. 2) deadline, we have no contract.”

The workers, D’Agnolo said, are “devastated.”

“It was sad, regardless of what we got for them and I think it was substantial,” he said.

“It was still sad signing the final document.”

There is hope for future jobs at the site. The Town of Amhersburg says it’s already heard from a few companies interested in developing the bottling facility.