OTTAWA â A Federal Court judge has ordered a full hearing on the Public Service Alliance of Canadaâs bid to quash the government’s three-day-a-week office mandate for public servants.
The decision by Justice Glennys L. McVeigh opens the door for a full airing of the reasons behind Treasury Board’s decision in May to revise its return-to-office mandate, increasing in-office attendance to three days a week for public servants and four days a week for executives.
PSAC president Sharon DeSousa called the decision an âimportant win for federal workers fighting for a fair and transparent approach to telework.â
Treasury Board will now have to put on the record the justification and any evidence to back its decision to bring workers back to the office for three days. Itâs unclear when that hearing will be.
The Treasury Board order, which comes into effect Sept. 9, came out of the blue without consultation with unions and threw the workforce into upheaval. Prior to the change, public servants were expected to come to the office for two to three days a week.
Workers were in an uproar, especially in the Ottawa-Gatineau region, where most departments are headquartered. Federal unions responded with a flurry of grievances and unfair practices complaints that will take months to wind through the Federal Public Sector Labour Relations and Employment Board.
In late May, PSAC asked the Federal Court for a judicial review to set aside the governmentâs revised return-to-office mandate as an âabuse of discretion and authority.â
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Treasury Board has long argued working conditions, such as location of work is a management right under the Financial Administration Act. PSAC is arguing that Treasury Board abused or exceeded its authority by upping in-office attendance for reasons that arenât âvalid, legitimate or consistentâ with the act.
The union alleges the amended order was unnecessary for employment and workplace purposes while claiming it was done for âunauthorized or ulterior purposeâ and irrelevant considerations that were not supported by evidence.
Treasury Board, however, countered with a motion to dismiss PSACâs application for a judicial review and, failing that, to stay or delay the hearings until the other legal challenges are resolved by the labour board.
In the ruling issued Thursday, Justice McVeigh said the burden of evidence to strike or dismiss a judicial review is high, but the Attorney-Generalâs lawyers representing the Treasury Board failed to deliver the âknock-out punchâ or âidentify an obvious or fatal flawâ in the grounds for PSACâs application to warrant dismissal.
âIt cannot be said that the Attorney-Generalâs argument clearly renders the type of âshow stopperâ or âknockout punchâ necessary to strike PSACâs application at this stage,â she wrote.
She stressed, however, that her decision to reject the governmentâs motion to dismiss PSACâs application should not be seen as supporting the unionâs argument. Rather, she concluded the case should proceed and be fully argued with all the relevant evidence.
âI simply conclude that the parties must argue this matter based on a full record,â McVeigh wrote.
As for delaying the hearings, McVeigh noted that the length of delay in granting a stay is a significant consideration. PSAC argued the labour board could take several years to deal grievances and complaints. Last year, the average case before the board took 29 months.
The government argued that the courts shouldnât be used as way to bypass labour board and its processes but McVeigh concluded that a delay âis not in the interest of justice.â
The return-to-office orders have led to one of the most contentious periods in federal labor relations in decades. It has ignited a major cultural and operational test for the public service. The unions are positioning the battle as labourâs next frontier for workersâ rights.
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Remote work during the pandemic gave public servants newfound power and control over their time â and theyâre not letting go without a fight. They feel more productive, enjoy better work-life balance and have more child-care options. Plus, itâs cheaper: no commuting, parking, restaurant or takeout lunches.
The lack of consultation on the latest change has been a major sore point for unions. They argue that the decision wasnât necessary for public servants to do their jobs and attacked it as unreasonable and unsupported by evidence.
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They maintain it also undermines the Liberals political goals of protecting the environment and freeing up federal office space for affordable housing. And many simply believe the government caved to pressure from struggling Ottawa area businesses that depend on public servants commuting downtown.
Experts in management and public administration argue a case can be made about the importance of inculcating workplace culture and ethics, but that government has not made it well â and certainly not well enough to convince many workers.
Treasury Board maintains that three days a week in the office maximizes the benefits of working in person, such as better collaboration, onboarding new recruits and building a performance culture âconsistent with the values and ethics of the public service.â
Last spring, unions vowed a âsummer of discontentâ to pressure the government into reversing the order that largely didnât materialize. With Sept. 9 fast approaching, the four major unions held a series of townhalls this week laying out their ground game for the coming months.
Theyâre planning legal challenges and to swamp the system with individual grievances and duty to accommodate requests. There will be occupational health and safety complaints, rallies, protests and petitions.
The next step is to mobilize workers in departments and launch a national campaign later this fall. At PSACâs last convention, delegates approved a $1-million âfight-backâ fund. Other unions are expected to join and kick in funds.