What happened: The federal government is set to mandate workers back in the office three days per week, Le Droit reported. The increase by one day per week to the current hybrid work schedule has come as a surprise to the federal unions, who said they were not consulted.
While it wouldn’t confirm that an announcement was imminent, the federal Treasury Board told CTV that it was “committed to hybrid work” and “continue to assess how hybrid work is implemented and optimized across the public service, adapting as necessary.”
Labour strife? The recent public service strike was largely fought over hybrid working policies for public servants. The Public Service Alliance of Canada said it had heard nothing from the government, and said any changes without consultation would be a betrayal of the agreement made just last year.
“If the Treasury Board does decide to move in this direction, then it completely flies in the face and goes against all the commitments they made at the bargaining table to work with the union to achieve flexible hybrid work arrangements for public service workers,” a PSAC spokesperson said to CTV.
Local reaction: Mayor Mark Sutcliffe said the move by the federal government to adopt widespread hybrid working arrangements since the start of the pandemic has had a detrimental effect on the downtown. But, perhaps hoping not to anger a significant bloc of voters in the city, he has stopped short of calling outright for workers to return to the office five days a week.
“We need to work with the federal government on a solution, and many solutions to make sure that we have economic prosperity in the downtown core, that small businesses and restaurants and shop owners are protected, that our finances as a city are protected,” Sutcliffe said according to CTV.
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Biden forced the US government to 2/week a while ago because he thought it would help him with republicans.
And as soon as he did it republicans acted like they never cared about it.
Honestly 2 days seems like almost the perfect balance if you can work full remote.
For a government that supposedly cares about climate change this decision doesn't make any sense to me.
You want more people in the downtown to support businesses? Convert all those unused offices to housing ya goofs
0 mandatory days (with the option of working in an office if you prefer) is the only moral choice if your job can be performed remotely. I won't hear any argument to the contrary.
Not sure about in Canada, but:
In America government building are owned by a government agency (GSA).
GSA rents office space in those building to other agencies.
If those agencies don't need office space, then the GSA goes broke and can't afford the buildings. No one else really needs them, so selling now would be a huge loss of money.
So America coasted until agencies needed to sign leases, then Biden forced back to office so they'd have to sign new leases with GSA so the GSA could afford to keep them.
But again, I don't know if Canada runs their government as ass backwards as America where everything is split between agencies that work in a capitalist environment with each other.
So you might not have had some agencies return to office to "bail out" another.