Mississauga residents should be able to visit their local branches starting Wednesday, the city announced Monday evening.

Members of CUPE 1989, which represents Mississauga library workers, have voted to ratify the tentative agreement they reached with the city late last week.

Pending ratification by the Mississauga Library Board and Mississauga city council — which is holding a special meeting on Tuesday at 1 p.m. to vote on the deal — the city announced that services will resume as follows:

All library branches will reopen at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, and immediately resume their regular hours.

All library programming will resume on Thursday.

Late fines, which have been suspended for the duration of the strike, will not begin accruing again until the branches reopen.

Laura Kaminker, president of CUPE 1989, told CBC News that the vote was "resounding," with 99 per cent of library workers backing the deal. According to Kamiker, the agreement:

Gives all library workers a 1.75 per cent pay increase for each of the agreement's four years.

Provides a salary bump for library pages, the largest and lowest-paid group of library workers, to $15 per hour.

Does not include various provisions the city wanted for part-time workers, such as "demands about how they would use their unpaid vacation."

The City of Mississauga declined to disclose details of the agreement, and said they would be published once it was ratified.

Library workers walked off the job on July 3, after 96 per cent of them rejected an offer from the city that included a 1.5 per cent wage increase. At the time CUPE 1989 noted that increase fell below the rate of inflation, and followed on two years of much smaller increases.

​Kamiker added that library workers are "moving back into the workplace in the spirit of cooperation and reconciliation. We love our jobs and we want to be back at work."