Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal back-to-office mandate begins Monday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2023 11:42 AM
  • Federal back-to-office mandate begins Monday

OTTAWA - The federal government says repercussions for public servants who refuse to return to in-person work will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.

Starting Monday, all federal employees who are still working from home will begin the transition back to in-person work.

Treasury Board President Mona Fortier announced last month that all departments must bring workers back to the office at least two to three times a week by the end of March.

In an interview Thursday, she did not specify what the consequences may be for anyone who refuses to return.

"Those that do not comply by the end of March, management will (decide) if they face disciplinary measures or not, but each situation will be assessed case-by-case," said Fortier.

Fortier said the return-to-office plan is needed because of "inconsistencies" in remote work policies across federal departments. She would not clarify what those inconsistencies were in an interview with The Canadian Press and did not say whether the federal government has data to illustrate those inconsistencies. Instead, she said fairness and equity are the principles guiding the hybrid work model.

Chris Aylward, national president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, said people are willing to return to the office if they receive a clear answer as to why it is necessary.

"Our members are completely confused," said Aylward, whose union represents 165,000 federal public servants.

He said he regularly hears from members about their struggles to secure childcare and their reluctance to spend hours of their day commuting if they are able to work productively from home.

"The government (needs) to stop this right now and to come to the bargaining table so that we can negotiate this, get it into the collective agreement, so that our members' rights are protected," said Aylward.

The union is in active negotiations with the Treasury Board, and PSAC believes any rules about hybrid work should be hashed out at the bargaining table. Those talks are not progressing well, however, with both parties filing separate labour complaints against the other.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces
Permanent residents can now apply to join the Canadian Armed Forces, regardless of whether they have been trained by a foreign military. It's the latest effort by Canada's military to boost recruitment numbers, which are lagging well behind the target of adding 5,900 new members by March.

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report
Safeguard Defenders - a not-for-profit human rights group - says two of the new locations are in Canada: one in Vancouver and the second unknown. The group's previous report alleges employees from the overseas police system use intimidation and threats to enforce the “involuntary" return of immigrants back to China for persecution.

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says after two years of low rates of flu, mostly due to travel restrictions, the province is seeing a "dramatic increase" in illness and it arrived sooner than normal.

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

BC Assessment warns values up but not current

BC Assessment warns values up but not current
BC Assessment says in a statement that most owners can expect to see a five to 15 per cent rise in values when notices are issued Jan. 3. However, it says those figures are based on the real estate market as of July 1, 2022, and conditions have changed.  

BC Assessment warns values up but not current

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review
Delta Mayor George Harvie says some drivers from Delta were stranded in their cars for up to 10 hours, while those in other parts of the region have told media that 45-minute commutes turned into 12 hours of gridlock.

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD
A person who was with the man when he began firing quickly fled and called 9-1-1, reporting that the shooter had been acting strangely for several days. VPD officers surrounded the building and evacuated neighbours who were in harm’s way so they could begin communicating with the suspect.

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD