Jenn’s New Year’s Message to Members

Fellow members,

The New Year is here and I want to take this opportunity to sincerely wish you all the very best in 2023 for you and your families.

This January also happens to mark my first full year as your President. It’s been an intense year, to say the least!  Over the past twelve months, PIPSC members have faced many very difficult challenges.

Most recently, the Treasury Board’s Direction on Prescribed Presence in the Workplace, which the Employer also wishes to extend to federal organizations outside the Core Public Service, has shocked our members.

The Treasury Board’s one-size-fits-all approach comes despite previous commitments to continue consulting with unions and implement tailored plans for each department. It is the total opposite of what it had been promising: a hybrid approach that takes into account the unique circumstances of federal public servants. It has instead chosen to bulldoze through a very bad plan. Yet the Treasury Board has provided very little clarity so far around how it will implement it.

Thousands of PIPSC members have already started bargaining their next collective agreements with the Treasury Board, where telework is a critical issue on the table. This doesn’t set the stage for good faith negotiations with the Employer.

We have demanded a halt to the Treasury Board’s plan and continue to advocate for safe, flexible return to workplace policies for all our members. We are working with other unions, as well as our Legal team and our Labour Relations experts, to understand exactly what our options are.

We will of course keep our members updated on developments as soon as we know more ourselves.

Looking forward, 2023 will be a watershed year for the Institute and its members.

For example, we are about to head into many difficult rounds of bargaining, with 33 of our Groups negotiating new collective agreements.

We must defend our members in New Brunswick who are facing blatantly anti-union legislation that would enshrine unfair rules around job action notice, give the government the ability to bring in non-unionized scab workers, as well as more power to change the work schedules of essential workers.

We must defend our members in Ontario who have been under attack from their provincial government and whose wages have been essentially frozen since 2019.  This past December, we took out a series of billboard ads in key locations urging the government to respect its workers and repeal its anti-labour legislation - which was actually struck down by the Ontario Superior Court in November!

And we must make sure that our members in separate agencies or in smaller departments receive the same quality of service from our union as their counterparts in the Core Public Service. 

But our challenges can definitely lead to positive outcomes for our members.

The employer knows we are right on the issue of contracting out. It just doesn’t want to admit it publicly. But our message is being heard by Canadians across the country, who are increasingly fed up with their money being thrown out the door on hapless, expensive projects such as the ArriveCan app. 

Our ongoing work on tax fairness and our push for more resources for the Canada Revenue Agency could lead to the recovery of up to $30B, money that could be used to support more and better public services. And index our wages to inflation.

The Future Of Work can be made more accessible and equitable for our racialized members.

Our work to defend public science is directly in support of the public good.

These are just some of the key issues we will be focusing on in the New Year.

As always, don’t hesitate to get in touch with me and let me know what’s on your mind. That’s what I’m here for!

Looking forward to serving you to the best of my ability in 2023,

Jenn Carr
President

 


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.

15 January 2019
The New Year will see the Institute continue to be very active in defending the interests of its members, and I would like to take this opportunity to keep you informed of some of the key issues we will be facing over the next twelve months.

11 January 2019
Like many Canadians, I was sorry to learn yesterday that Treasury Board President and Minister of Digital Government Scott Brison is leaving Cabinet and will not be seeking re-election later this year.

4 December 2018
While PIPSC, alongside our union partners at the National Joint Council Dental Care Board of Management, is still negotiating hard to improve the majority of our members’ dental plan (NJC Component 55555), I am very pleased to announce that we have nailed down the following significant improvemen

30 November 2018
Earlier this year, in its 2018 Budget, the federal government announced its intention to replace the catastrophic Phoenix pay system with a new, functional alternative.