FREDERICTON -- The New Brunswick government is directing both the administration and striking academics at Mount Allison University to resume collective bargaining with the help of a special mediator.

Larry Steinberg, a Toronto-based lawyer, will meet with the two sides Wednesday and Thursday in an effort to resolve a strike that began Jan. 27.

As special mediator, Steinberg has the authority to summon witnesses, require them to give evidence under oath and produce documents.

"This intervention demonstrates that the provincial government is actively trying to help the parties and at the same time without interfering in the collective bargaining process," Jody Carr, the province's post-secondary education minister, said Monday.

The Mount Allison Faculty Association, which represents 154 full-time and 56 part-time faculty and librarians, says pay, pensions and benefits are the centre of the dispute.

The school has said it presented contract proposals that are consistent with recent collective agreements at other universities. It has called on the union to accept its offer to enter into binding arbitration, something the striking workers have already rejected.

A government-appointed mediator was brought in to negotiations last week, but to no avail, Carr said.

He said there are few options left for the government if the special mediator is unable to assist in reaching an agreement, adding that back-to-work legislation would be a last resort.

Academic staff at the University of New Brunswick returned to work last week following a three-week strike.

That labour dispute was resolved after the government ordered the two sides back to the bargaining table with the help of a special mediator.