Truro News

Phoenix pay problems spike again

- By Terry Pedwell

The federal government’s bug-addled public service pay system saw a fresh spike in problems last month, the result of new labour contracts and summer hiring, officials said Friday.

Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada managed to stabilize the backlog of pay change files that were being dealt with in March and April, deputy minister Marie Lemay told a teleconfer­ence.

But the backlog surged by about 10 per cent last month when the Phoenix system was inundated with new pay requests, she said.

The system was jammed by pay changes made to accommodat­e new collective agreements coming into force for roughly 24,000 government employees working as financial managers, auditors, scientists and patent examiners, among others.

In addition, about 5,000 summer students were hired.

There are roughly 345,000 pay change transactio­ns currently

in the system, about 265,000 more than the system’s average monthly capacity of about 80,000, officials said.

“All this means the number of transactio­ns awaiting processing has grown,” said Lemay.

At least one union representi­ng civil servants predicted the backlog could grow larger still as new collective agreements come into force.

“The government should have foreseen this challenge months ago,” said Steve Hindle, vicepresid­ent of the Profession­al Institute of the Public Service of Canada.

“The number of pay transactio­ns resulting from implementa­tion of new collective agreements is only going to increase over the coming months.”

The government said last month it was hoping to enlist 200 temporary workers on top of the 300 hired to date to deal with the Phoenix issues, which initially left tens of thousands of public servants underpaid, overpaid or not paid at all.

Lemay said Friday she expected up to 230 new pay system employees could be hired over the next two years, 90 of them at the government pay centre in Miramichi, N.B.

“We need the capacity,” said Lemay. “It absolutely will help us get through that queue.”

How long it will take to tame the backlog will depend on how quickly the department can hire - and train - new compensati­on advisers, said Lemay, noting that intensive “boot camp” training sessions were underway for the latest new hires.

The government said it will spend $142 million in hopes of bringing the Phoenix system to what it calls a “steady state.”

The Liberals blamed the expense on the Conservati­ves, who they said axed hundreds of workers who handled pay claims before Phoenix was brought on line.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Deputy Minister of Public Works and Government Services Marie Lemay (right) and and associate assistant deputy minister Rosanna Di Paola speak to reporters during a technical briefing on the Phoenix pay system in Ottawa in August 2016.
CP PHOTO Deputy Minister of Public Works and Government Services Marie Lemay (right) and and associate assistant deputy minister Rosanna Di Paola speak to reporters during a technical briefing on the Phoenix pay system in Ottawa in August 2016.

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