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Tentative agreement reached for 120,000 public servants

Tens of thousands of federal public servants will return to work after the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the federal government reached a tentative agreement. 

Strike action continues for 35,000 Canada Revenue Agency workers.

A red and yellow union flag flies in front of a picket line.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) says it has reached a tentative contract agreement with the Treasury Board covering more than 120,000 federal government workers across the country.

The national strike is now over for most workers who fall under the Treasury Board. They’ll be required to return to work Monday at 9 a.m. ET or their next scheduled shift, the union said in a statement early Monday.

PSAC says strike action continues for 35,000 Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) workers nationwide, with contract negotiations ongoing.

Thenational strike for more than 155,000 federal public servants under the PSAC began at 12:01 a.m. April 19.

Two groups covered by the union have been on strike: a group of approximately 120,000 employees under the Treasury Board spread across several government departments and agencies, and a smaller group of more than 35,000 workers at the CRA.

About 110,000 to 120,000 PSAC members were eligible to walk off the job after factoring out staff doing work designated as essential, such as employment insurance or pensions.

A union leader leaves a news conference.

Over the course of the strike, picket lines formed across the country while some government services — including taxes, passports and immigration — were disrupted.

Some buildings at CFB Petawawa temporarily lost heat and hot water after the base’s Central Heating Plant shut down.

What led to the strike?

Contracts for both groups expired in 2021. Negotiations between the federal government and PSAC’s two groups began that year, but the union declared in 2022 it had reached an impasse.

PSAC had previously asked for a 4.5 per cent raise each year for 2021, 2022 and 2023. It said April 24 it had lowered its ask but didn’t elaborate on its demand.

The most recent public offer from the government to each group was a nine per cent raise over three years, a total that matched recommendations of the third-party Public Interest Commission.

Remote work arrangements, priority for senior staff in the event of downsizing and a ban on contracting out work were the other three priority issues identified in an open letter published by the Treasury Board on April 24.

With files from CBC News

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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