Federal officials | Ottawa offers telework to avoid strike

(Ottawa) There was a time when an employee had to cross the picket line if he wanted to work anyway. Today, it is possible for some civil servants to circumvent the strike with teleworking. The federal government did not hesitate to remind them of this, which the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) denounces.


A note was sent to employees of the Department of Employment and Social Development a few weeks ago telling them that they “can choose not to exercise their right to strike” and that they will receive their wages if they continue to work.

A senior Treasury Board official confirmed in a briefing Wednesday that the direction given to the entire public service for hybrid working continues to apply. Civil servants whose tasks can be performed remotely can thus choose to work from home two or three days a week, depending on the agreement reached with their manager.

“The employer is not doing the right thing by encouraging employees to break strike lines!” says Judith Côté, national vice-president for Quebec of the Canada Employment and Immigration Union. We met her Wednesday morning in the heart of the small crowd of civil servants gathered on René-Lévesque Boulevard West, in Montreal, on the occasion of the first day of the strike.

“During a strike, unionized employees have the right to report to work,” said Professor Michael Wernick, holder of the Jarislowsky Research Chair in Public Sector Management, in an interview. “On the other hand, the employer has an obligation to continue to deliver services and to agree to pay employees who show up for work,” adds the man who was Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to the Cabinet under the Trudeau government from 2016 to 2019.

Except that telework can thus harm the ability of the union to negotiate, notes the professor of management and law at the University of Ottawa Gilles LeVasseur.

It’s healthy in our society to have power relations that are clearly stated and where we don’t circumvent the system. It creates a lot more turbulence and conflict to know that people are able to circumvent a machine.

Gilles LeVasseur, professor of management and law at the University of Ottawa

Penalty imposed by the union

Employees who would be tempted to virtually cross the picket line expose themselves to a financial penalty imposed by their union, equivalent to the daily indemnity paid to each striker. The latter receive $75 a day for four hours of picketing.


PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS

New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh demonstrated alongside striking workers in Ottawa on Wednesday.

The leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP), Jagmeet Singh, called on all public servants on strike to stick together. “We support the idea of ​​solidarity where all the workers are together to fight for better working conditions, better wages,” he said, refraining from qualifying as scabs those who decide to band together. apart.

The NDP urges the Trudeau government to introduce anti-scab legislation. Their agreement stipulates that the Liberals have until the end of 2023 to comply if they want to continue to have the support of the New Democrats to govern.

Neither Prime Minister Justin Trudeau nor Treasury Board President Mona Fortier responded directly to whether there was a contradiction between the call to public servants to cross the picket line and the government’s promise to introduce anti-scab legislation.

With the collaboration of Lila Dussault, The Press

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  • $100,000
    Sum of picketing allowances paid by the PSAC for the day of Wednesday

    SOURCE: Public Service Alliance of Canada


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