Times Colonist

Feds mull office needs, more staff could work permanentl­y from home

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The federal government is taking a close look at the amount of office space it will need in the coming years as it considers how some of Canada’s hundreds of thousands of federal public servants could end up working from home permanentl­y.

The review was revealed Monday by Treasury Board president Jean-Yves Duclos, who oversees the bureaucrac­y as a workforce, as the government released a guide for the eventual return of public servants to their normal workplaces.

The vast majority of federal public servants have been working from home since mid-March as COVID-19 saw offices and other workspaces across the country shuttered to slow transmissi­on of the illness.

While there have been some hiccups and criticisms, Duclos said significan­t lessons have been learned — and efficienci­es realized — over the past three months even as the government dramatical­ly ramped up the ability for bureaucrat­s to work remotely.

That included doubling the number of secure internet connection­s available to public servants and tripling the number of minutes available for teleconfer­ences so workers and supervisor­s can stay in touch and co-ordinate their activities.

As a result, “we’ve started really reflecting on the number of offices and the number of office spaces we want over the next few years,” Duclos said during the daily COVID-19 ministeria­l news conference in Ottawa.

The comments coincided with the release of a 30-page document aimed at providing guidance to federal public servants at all levels for getting back into their offices even though the pandemic continues to pose a threat.

The guidebook includes directions to senior management to take into considerat­ion their department­s’ own requiremen­ts as well as the circumstan­ces of individual employees and their families. It also makes clear that the return to “normal” will take time.

“Employees whose work can be done remotely should continue to take advantage of recent investment­s in IT infrastruc­ture and digital skills, as the work and equipment permit,” the guidebook tells federal workers.

“Employees who are considered vulnerable as defined by public health agencies should be supported to continue to work remotely when possible.”

Federal department­s and agencies are also directed to track and report on cases of COVID-19 among their staff, which includes tracking incidents in which employees refuse to work on safety grounds.

“Noting that health authoritie­s have stated that physical distancing measures should remain, these plans will make provisions for the fact that many public servants will continue to work remotely for some time to come,” Duclos said.

He promised federal public servants would receive “reasonable notice and assurances” about safety measures before being asked to return to their offices.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada, the biggest federalgov­ernment union, was largely happy with the government’s plan. But it did express concerns about the level of discretion managers have in forcing employees back to work.

“We hope to see some uniformity throughout all the department­s and even inside the same department depending on their region,” said PSAC national executive vice-president Magali Picard.

Picard also flagged concerns about any move toward permanent remote work for federal public servants that goes too fast, saying that while there are potential benefits, experience has also shown that such a working environmen­t is not for everyone.

“We know because we had some workers working from home before the pandemic,” she said.

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