Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal workers to get Phoenix compensation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2020 07:25 PM
  • Federal workers to get Phoenix compensation

Federal employees stand to collect up to $2,500 each in cash payments for "pain and suffering" resulting from the government's failed Phoenix pay system under an agreement reached with the country's biggest civil-service union.

The settlement comes as government workers scramble to get emergency benefits out to individual Canadians and businesses affected by the economic crisis that has flowed from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The lump-sum payments are contained in a side deal reached late Thursday alongside a tentative contract settlement for about 70,000 civil servants that includes average annual wage increases of 2.11 per cent over a three-year term.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada said the payments are compensation for the problems caused to federal workers by the broken Phoenix pay system, which created underpayments, overpayments or in some cases no pay cheques for tens of thousands of government employees.

"After four years of stress, uncertainty, and financial hardships because their employer couldn't pay them correctly or on time, our members will finally be compensated for the Phoenix pay disaster," PSAC national president Chris Aylward said in a statement.

The compensation agreement affects about 140,000 PSAC members but could also affect members of other unions that last year agreed to compensation of five days of cashable leave.

PSAC, Canada's biggest civil service union, had rejected that settlement, calling the five extra vacation days "meagre."

The other unions may benefit from the PSAC deal, however, because their agreements included clauses that would provide their members with compensation equal to whatever PSAC was able to negotiate.

The PSAC agreement, which does not require ratification by its members, would see general damages paid to federal public service employees working for a range of government departments between 2016 and 2020.

It also includes compensation for the late implementation of collective agreements during those years caused by the Phoenix pay system.

Compensation totals $1,000 for employees working in the fiscal year 2016-17 and $500 in each of the following three years.

Beyond the lump sum, government employees who suffered severe losses due to the Phoenix pay system, such as losing their homes, cars or investments, or who had their credit ratings harmed, can claim damages.

When conceived in 2009, the Phoenix system was supposed to streamline the public service payroll and save taxpayers more than $70 million annually.

But after its launch in 2016, more than half of civil servants experienced pay problems, forcing the government to hire extra staff and set up satellite pay centres across the country in an effort to chip away at problem cases.

As of June 24, the backlog of problem files had been reduced to 125,000 financial transactions beyond normal workload, according to the public service pay centre dashboard, which tracks pay issues.

The most recent estimated cost of stabilizing Phoenix was pegged at more than $1 billion, not including the amount it will take to create, test and launch a new pay system that works.

Separately, PSAC and the Treasury Board Secretariat, which is responsible for negotiating contracts with federal employees, said they had reached a tentative settlement late Thursday for about half of PSAC's members.

The three-year deal for program and administrative services group employees includes wage increases of 2.8 per cent in the first year, followed by 2.2 per cent in the second and 1.35 per cent in the final year.

The tentative agreement applies to close to 84,000 federal employees, including non-unionized workers, according to Treasury Board.

It also contains new provisions for caregiver leave, extended parental leave, and up to 10 days of domestic violence leave.

Details on when a ratification vote will be held are expected next week.

MORE National ARTICLES

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver
A massive blaze engulfed an apartment buidling in South Vancouver Thursday evening. Firefighters were at intersection of West 62nd Avenue and Columbia Street. The fire gutted the four-storey apartment building under construction and turned it into ash.

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver
Vancouver Police are warning the public that Frank William Skani will be residing in Vancouver and poses a significant risk to women in the community. The Correctional Service of Canada has assessed Skani as high risk for sexual recidivism.

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane
Military investigators have revealed the sequence of events that led the Royal Canadian Air Force plane normally used by the prime minister to run into a tow tractor and hangar wall and suffer severe damage.

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China
The Senate's ethics committee is recommending that a Conservative senator be censured for breaching the upper house’s ethics code when he accepted an all-expenses paid trip to China in 2017.

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools
Search warrants executed at three separate residences, led Surrey RCMP to the seizure of items stolen from Surrey schools during a series of break and enters.

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide
The federal government has released updated figures showing once again that Canadian veterans are at greater risk of suicide than those who have never served in uniform.

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide