Review of the Employment Equity Act

March 23, 2021

The Honourable Filomena Tassi, P.C., M.P.
Minister of Labour
House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario  K1A 0A6

By email: Filomena.Tassi@parl.gc.ca   

Dear Minister Tassi:

I would like to express my appreciation for your decision to review the Employment Equity Act. This legislation was created some 35 years ago and while it has undergone modest amendments over this period, this is indeed the right time to introduce more substantial changes to it that will help protect and empower Canadians from the four designated groups it covers – women, Indigenous Peoples, persons with disabilities and members of visible minorities.

I understand that you plan to create a working group that will study how to modernize the federal Employment Equity regime. I am asking you to include Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) representatives in this committee.

As the bargaining agent for over 60,000 public service professionals employed by the federal and provincial governments, PIPSC has for many years worked to raise awareness, provide support and collaborate with employers to remove potential workplace barriers for our members who belong to these groups. We have held constructive discussions with the Treasury Board on the issue of Employment Equity in the past and I believe our experience in this regard would be of great benefit to both the working group and to our members.

I thank you for your immediate attention to this matter and I look forward to your response.

Sincerely,

Debi Daviau
President


5 March 2019
Protecting our members’ pensions remains a top priority for PIPSC. On February 26, 2019 CRPEG President Jonathan Fitzpatrick was joined by Canadian Alliance of Nuclear Workers (CANW) representatives Steven Schumann and Matt Wayland  in a meeting with three members of the Opposition on Parliament Hill. The issue: the return of Canadian Nuclear Laboratories workers into a public service pension plan.

28 February 2019
The news this week that it will take a further three to five years to clean up the Phoenix backlog, and 10 or more years to stabilize the system, makes it obvious that on the third anniversary of the launch of the Phoenix pay system we should be laser-focused on implementing its replacement as soon as possible.

21 February 2019
On Tuesday February 5th PIPSC members were on Parliament Hill to discuss the importance of the critical public services we deliver to Canadians. A delegation of close to 30 members, representing a range of Groups and Regions, met with over 30 Parliamentarians. It was a unique opportunity to bring key priorities directly to the decision makers.

20 February 2019
PIPSC recently submitted comments to Finance Canada’s public consultation into draft legislative proposals related to salary overpayments.

11 February 2019
On February 6, 2019, PIPSC President Debi Daviau and Steward Éric Massey, Nurse at the Archambault Institution in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, Quebec appeared before the Senate Standing Committee on Human Rights to discuss the issues faced by our members at correctional institutions across Canada, in particular those of our health care services members (SH Group).

16 January 2019
The federal government has just announced that it is proposing new measures to help correct the wide-ranging issue of employees having to repay the gross instead of the net amount of a salary overpayment caused by system, administrative or clerical errors. This is particularly significant for PIPSC members: tens of thousands of you have experienced this problem first-hand thanks to the calamitous Phoenix system.