Strikes in the public sector: Legault ready to improve Quebec’s salary offer

François Legault says he is ready to improve Quebec’s salary offer to public sector employees, but only in exchange for greater flexibility from the unions.

• Read also: Historic day: 560,000 workers on strike

However, the Prime Minister has not quantified the increase that he is ready to put on the table.

For the moment, Quebec is offering 10.3% over five years, in addition to larger increases in certain sectors. With all the sums proposed, including the lump sum, the government estimates its current proposal at 14.8%.

“We are ready to improve our offer which currently shows an increase of 14.8%. But I insist, it is not true that we are going to miss another negotiation to find the flexibility that is necessary to provide more effective services to Quebecers,” declared François Legault before entering question period. , accompanied by the President of the Treasury Board, Sonia LeBel.

The proposed increase would affect both the salaries of all employees (the “parameters”) and the sector, specified Mr. Legault while some 565,500 workers took to the streets on Thursday.

  • Listen to the interview with Claude Gravel, lawyer specializing in labor law, on Marie Montpetit’s microphone via QUB radio:
Lack of respect

For the president of the FTQ, Magali Picard, the Prime Minister’s exit represents a “lack of respect” for the people at the negotiating tables.

“I find it a shame that the negotiators who, for a year, have been working hard to be able to reach an agreement in principle learned from the media this morning that he is ready to review his salary offer », declared the representative of the Union Common Front.

Launched in the middle of an unlimited general strike, the Autonomous Federation of Education (FAE) reacted in the same direction. “If Mr. Legault is serious, it is at the negotiating tables that it must happen first,” asserts its president, Mélanie Hubert.

More flexibility

The Prime Minister deplores the fact that the unions refuse to grant more flexibility to the government in the organization of work.

For example, Quebec would like to allow nurses to choose to work a 12-hour shift or work evenings and weekends in order to reduce the use of mandatory overtime.

The Minister of Health summarized the government’s philosophy as follows: “We must change union rights for personal rights.”

Quebec also wants to be able to assign classes to teachers from June, rather than doing it in a hurry just before the start of the school year.

“They don’t want to give us that flexibility,” says François Legault.

But the president of the FAE replies that the assignment of teachers is negotiated with the service centers according to local needs. “By changing the rules at this time, he is making things more complex and delaying a possible settlement,” says Mélanie Hubert.

The Minister of Education, Bernard Drainville, is also concerned about the impact of a prolonged suspension of classes. “This strike, if it lasts too long, it will have an impact on the success of children. There are delays that will accumulate. Our children, they have barely come out of two years of pandemic,” he points out.

– With TVA News

Strike calendar
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Tuesday

Common Front Strike Day 1 of 3

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Wednesday

Common Front Strike Day 2 of 3

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THURSDAY

Common Front Strike Day 3 of 3

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FIQ strike Day 1 of 2

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FAE general strike Unlimited

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