Blowing the Whistle on Canada’s Whistleblower Law

Last week I had the opportunity to appear as a witness at the Standing Committee on Government Operations for their review of the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act, commonly referred to as whistleblower legislation. I was joined by the Institute’s General Counsel Isabelle Roy.

I spoke to Members of Parliament on the Committee about the important contributions professionals working in the federal public service make every day to ensure the lives of Canadians are safer, healthier and more prosperous.

I reiterated that whistle blowing is a service to the public. It only happens in the rarest of circumstances, when a public servant has tried every other avenue for resolving a significant concern. Sadly, whistle blowing has also meant too often sacrificing your career for the sake of the public interest.

It should not be this way, and we can fix it. I made some specific recommendations to the committee which I have outlined below.

  • Reverse the onus of reprisal in law

Fear of reprisal remains one of the main obstacles to whistle blowing and the current law fails to address this concern. The simple solution is to require a reverse onus, which would mean that an allegation of reprisal is assumed to be true unless the employer can rebut it.

  • Fix the investigation process under the Public Service Integrity Commissioner.

Our experience in representing members demonstrates that the Commissioner's investigation processes are often unfair, lacking in thoroughness, and insensitive to whistleblowers.

  • Eliminate the Public Service Integrity Commissioner's gatekeeper role and replace it with a "direct access" system.

The commissioner performs a gatekeeper role in respect of reprisal complaints. This role means that only the Commissioner can decide which complaints are referred to the Tribunal.

  • Close the outsourcing loophole.

Federal over-reliance on outsourcing is creating a shadow public service, where the rules, regulations and guidelines for accountability do not apply. The shadow public service is a massive loophole when it comes to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act.

We recommend that PC and MAC users download these files to their hard drive to avoid playback issues.

Our intervention on this issue resulted in my giving a few media interviews, including with CTV’s Power Play and CBC’s Out in the Open, featuring whistle blower Shiv Chopra.

You can take action on this issue by signing the following petition to protect whistleblowers here.

PIPSC will continue to advocate for legislative change to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act and work to ensure the culture of punishing those who come forward is changed.

Better Together!

Debi Daviau

President


9 May 2018
Last month, I had the opportunity to represent PIPSC and the Canadian labour movement at the Labour 7 (L-7) summit in Ottawa. This was a preparatory meeting hosted by the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) leading up to the G-7 meeting this summer in Québec.

25 April 2018
Friends, I have great news! You finally have a union.

24 April 2018
Like all Canadians, members of the Institute are shocked by the senseless deaths and horrific injuries that occurred yesterday afternoon in Toronto. Our thoughts are with the victims and their families.

6 April 2018
Last week I had the opportunity to meet with the National Capital Region Liberal Caucus. I was grateful for the warm reception I received and know that many of the Members of Parliament rearranged their schedules to be able to attend. I used this opportunity to raise PIPSC’s continued concerns with the disastrous Phoenix pay system.

14 March 2018
Following tremendous pressure on the part of public service bargaining agents, the government has finally introduced some much-needed flexibility in the recovery of overpayments caused by Phoenix.

28 February 2018
I am pleased to report that yesterday’s federal Budget committed $16M towards the building of an alternative pay system to replace the disastrous Phoenix.