Positive meeting with Treasury Board President Fortier about return to the workplace

On June 30, 2022 , President Jennifer Carr met with Treasury Board (TB) President Mona Fortier to discuss key member concerns, including the return to the workplace and the government’s strategic review of public services announced in its 2022 budget.  Overall, the meeting was friendly and collaborative and we look forward to an ongoing positive relationship with the TB President.

Return to the workplace

Jennifer advocated for the employer to show flexibility as the public service evolves into a “hybrid” model.

Throughout the pandemic, our members have demonstrated their ability to support Canadians while working remotely. With new technologies, we no longer need to be “tied to our desks.”

A majority of our members have expressed a preference for working from home at least part of the time. It creates a  better work-life balance with no loss of productivity or effectiveness.

The employer must provide access to hybrid and telework arrangements that are:

  • Equitable
  • Accommodating to individual preferences
  • Approved without bias or unreasonable criteria.

They also need to support the right to disconnect and work-life balance.

We will not stand for compromised safety for members who cannot or do not wish to work from home. Air quality, ventilation and building safety need to be front and centre in any return to work plans. All departments and agencies must be transparent and work with our representatives on their plans to “open up” worksites. They must respect collective agreements and all applicable legislation.

The TB wants this important conversation to happen at the National Joint Council, where representatives of federal bargaining agents and the employer regularly meet to discuss critical issues. While we support this collaborative approach, we need more details. As individual government departments and agencies develop their return to the workplace plans, our members have begun receiving notices of their eventual return to their regular work locations. This has been happening without consulting with the National Joint Council.

Strategic review of the public service

President Carr emphasized that the strategic review should not be a “one size fits all” review like the review under the Harper government. Our members,  and the Canadians they serve, are still feeling the impact of those cuts from over a decade ago. 

President Fortier reiterated the government’s desire for a “smarter, not smaller” public service. She is looking to create efficiencies and demonstrate fiscal responsibility - offering programs more efficiently while still maintaining service levels. She mentioned that monies saved by reducing the government’s real estate portfolio could be used to invest in housing and building communities – but nothing is finalized at this point. 


6 October 2017
Radio-Canada and the CBC have reported this week that Phoenix was “doomed from the start.” The reason? The business case prepared in 2009 under the previous government “lacked proper risk analysis and was politically motivated.” In the words of former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page, “You look at this business case, you can drive trucks through some of the holes under the risk analysis.”

3 October 2017
In light of the Phoenix fiasco and as part of a commitment made to bargaining agents to make it easier for their members to obtain information about their pay, Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSCPC) has just released its Pay Bulletin for September.

2 October 2017
The Institute has just filed two new policy grievances on Phoenix-related issues, accusing the Treasury Board of failing to implement the terms of the AV and SP Group collective agreements within the specified timeframe (120 and 90 days respectively).

29 September 2017
While much has been reported about the impact of the Phoenix pay system on current federal employees, comparatively little has been said about the harm done to retirees.

21 July 2017
Recently, I sent an opinion piece to the Globe and Mail about our members’ ongoing problems with the Phoenix pay system and what I consider to be one of the root causes of the debacle: outsourcing.

12 June 2017
The recent recommendations of yet another consultants’ report on Shared Services Canada (SSC) demonstrate that, when it comes to federal government outsourcing, there’s no shortage of private sector advice.

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