Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Canada federal employees no longer striking

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Dear Mr Brown,

I am wondering if the strike will, in fact, cause more delays with the processing of applicatio­ns.

TG

Dear TG:

The Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC), the union representi­ng the federal employees who went on strike, and the federal government have reached a tentative agreement. The strike impacted over 155,000 public servants, including those at Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada (IRCC).

It was the largest public sector strike in Canadian history. The strike began on April 19. PSAC instructed its members to return to work as of May 1, 2023.

Positions

The PSAC stated that their interest was seeking fair wages in the context of the current inflated cost of living, a better work-life balance, remote work, more workplace inclusivit­y, and reduced layoffs through the creation of more jobs, rather than contractin­g positions to private organisati­ons. The PSAC also stated that public service workers were as effective working remotely as when they were in the office, and that 90 per cent of workers want to continue working remotely.

The Government stated that the demands, as they were drafted during negotiatio­ns, would severely impact the ability to deliver services to Canadians and would limit its ability to effectivel­y manage employees within the public service.

the Agreement

The tentative agreement included higher wages which can close the gap between inflation; new and improved language relating to working from home, among other favourable provisions for its members. The PSAC stated that it had secured a total wage increase of 12.6 per cent over four years, having turned down an offer of nine per cent over three years when it called the strike. The deal includes a one-off payment of CAD$2,500 ($1,845).

The PSAC fell short of getting work from home enshrined in the collective bargaining agreement as the Treasury Board — the federal employer — refused. But there is a deal to address remote work requests individual­ly and in writing, which opens up the Government to the employee grievance process.

impact on immigratio­n

On May 1, 2023 Immigratio­n Minister Sean Fraser stated that close to 100,000 applicatio­ns were not processed during the work stoppage. It is expected that the IRCC will return to a pre-pandemic service standard in the months ahead.

Many applicants have been inconvenie­nced by additional backlog and wait times. The increased delay caused by the strike comes as Canada’s immigratio­n system is playing catch-up from pandemic delays, which is causing additional frustratio­n.

Please visit JAMAICA2CA­NADA.COM for additional informatio­n on Canadian permanent residence programmes including Express Entry, the Study & Work programmme, visas or appeals, etc.

Antonn Brown, BA, (Hons), LLB, MSC, RCIC, is an immigratio­n counsel and an accredited Canadian education agent of JAMAICA2CA­NADA.COM — a Canadian immigratio­n & education firm in Kingston — and Africanada­services. com in Abuja, Nigeria. Send questions/commentsto­documents.jamaica2ca­nada@documents.jamaica2ca­nada@gmail.com

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