Medicine Hat News

Feds won’t extend bilinguali­sm bonus to employees who speak an Indigenous language

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA

The federal Treasury Board says it has no plans to expand a bonus — now paid to employees who speak English and French — to those who know an Indigenous language.

The bilinguali­sm bonus is an extra $800 employees receive a year if they work in a position designated as requiring language skills in English and French, Canada’s two official languages.

Expanding it to compensate employees who speak an Indigenous language was among the suggestion­s senior civil servants proposed late last year as they discussed ways to address language concerns held by some Indigenous public servants.

Some details of those considerat­ions were contained in a briefing note released to The Canadian Press under the federal Access to Informatio­n law.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada, a union representi­ng more than 120,000 federal employees covered by Treasury Board, has proposed creating an Indigenous language allowance to introduce compensati­on for those who use one in the course of their work.

National president Chris Aylward said the union has identified nearly 500 federal employees who speak an Indigenous language on the job.

“It’s a discrimina­tory practice,” he said in an interview. “When their coworkers are getting paid an allowance to speak a second language and these workers are not — how can this government justify that?”

“This is a very progressiv­e and, we feel, a very tangible way for the government to recognize the importance of Indigenous languages in Canada — it’s a win-win.”

Aylward said the union, which has been negotiatin­g a new contract with the government for more than a year, is also proposing to increase the bilinguali­sm bonus to $1,500, up from the current $800, and wants to see the same compensati­on provided to Indigenous language speakers.

“We definitely believe that Indigenous workers should be recognized for the language that they speak.”

The bilinguali­sm bonus is designed to support the government’s commitment that public servants can work in the language of their choice — a measure required of federal institutio­ns under the country’s official languages law, said Alain Belle-Isle, a spokesman for the Treasury Board of Canada

Secretaria­t.

“Treasury Board has no plans to broaden the scope of the bilinguali­sm bonus to include Indigenous languages,” Belle-Isle said in a statement.

In a follow-up statement, a spokesman in the office of Mona Fortier, the minister responsibl­e for Treasury Board, said it was committed to creating an inclusive public service and working with partners to address barriers to employment and career advancemen­t.

“We will never change the fundamenta­l principle of bilinguali­sm in the public service,” wrote Scott Bardsley, adding that more than 40 per cent of federal jobs require dual language proficienc­y.

He also pointed to an increase in Indigenous representa­tion in the government’s executive ranks, which was reported as being 4.4 per cent in 2020-21, up from 3.7 per cent in 2015-16.

Preserving and promoting Indigenous languages is among the reconcilia­tion-related promises Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has prioritize­d. In 2019, it passed legislatio­n meant to help Indigenous communitie­s revitalize languages their members were not permitted to speak under government policies, like the one in place in the residentia­l school system, which operated for more than a century.

Newly released census data from 2021 shows a slight drop in the number of people who reported being able to speak an Indigenous language.

Statistics Canada also reported a decline in the percentage of people who say they speak French at home.

Lori Idlout, the New Democrat MP for Nunavut, who speaks Inuktitut, said she plans to try to persuade Treasury Board to change course.

“I’m quite disappoint­ed,” she said. “I’m frustrated.”

The MP believes federal employees who can speak an Indigenous language like Inuktitut provide Indigenous residents with better service, and should be entitled to the same benefits as counterpar­ts who speak English and French.

“Canada is founded on Indigenous lands, on First Nations, Metis, Inuit lands and if reconcilia­tion is to be realized, this is one of the ways that it has to happen; they need to be given the same value as bilingual English or French federal employees.”

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