Wednesday, May 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Large number of public servants in biggest departments breaking remote work rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Feb, 2025 10:55 AM
  • Large number of public servants in biggest departments breaking remote work rules

Large numbers of public servants working in the federal government's three biggest departments aren't following Ottawa's three-days-per-week office work rule, federal data shows.

The federal government's latest remote work mandate, which took effect in early September, requires all staff employed under the Treasury Board to work on-site a minimum of three days a week. Executives are expected to work in the office four days a week.

The Canadian Press asked for compliance rates from a number of federal departments, including the three with the largest workforces — the Department of National Defence, the Canada Revenue Agency and Employment and Social Development Canada.

Of those three, Defence, which employs about 28,700 people, saw the lowest rate of compliance with the three-day rule, especially in the National Capital Region.

The department, known informally as DND, says its average rate of compliance with the three-day rule in January was 60 per cent — but just 31 per cent in December.

DND's reported compliance rate nationally was 61 per cent in November and 72 per cent in both October and September.

Staff in the National Capital Region seemed less likely to meet the requirement, with 57 per cent of DND staff in the Ottawa area meeting the three-day requirement in November, compared with 69 per cent elsewhere. In September and October, 70 per cent of DND staff in the capital region were compliant, compared to 76 and 77 per cent outside the Ottawa area.

Andrée-Anne Poulin, a spokesperson for DND, said the data does not factor in all leave, including vacation, training and sick days.

Poulin said compliance rates only track employees with hybrid work arrangements, adding that about half of DND employees continued working on-site full-time throughout the pandemic and thereafter.

"DND’s compliance monitoring equips leadership with general information needed for oversight of the workforce," Poulin said in an email. "Managers are responsible for monitoring individual compliance by accounting for the location of employees during working hours."

The Canada Revenue Agency estimates that 80 per cent of its 59,000 employees met their on-site requirement in December, up from 76 per cent in November and 77 per cent in October.

Benoit Sabourin, a spokesperson for the CRA, said the agency's transition to increased on-site presence "has been going well" and most CRA employees are working under a hybrid schedule.

A graph shared by Employment and Social Development Canada, which employs just over 39,000 people, estimates its rate of compliance with the three-day rule has hovered at around 75 per cent since September.

Smaller departments and agencies saw varying levels of compliance.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, which employs around 13,000 public servants, says its compliance rate was 93 per cent in January, compared with 72 per cent in September. 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which employs about 6,800 public servants, says about 60 per cent of employees are front-line staff and have worked on-site since the start of the pandemic. 

The agency said the compliance rate among its other workers was 73 per cent between October and January, excluding the holiday period in December.

The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat says managers are responsible for monitoring their employees’ performance and presence in the workplace.

"Managers need to confirm expectations with employees and ensure compliance with the common hybrid work model," TBS spokesperson Martin Potvin said in August 2024.

A Treasury Board document says penalties for violating the in-office work rule can include verbal reprimand, written reprimand, suspension without pay and termination of employment.

"Before taking any of the above measures, managers should ensure that individual circumstances are considered on a case-by-case basis, including human rights obligations, such as the duty to accommodate, or whether an employee has a reasonable explanation for the behaviour," the document says.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada, which represents many federal public servants, says it has not heard of any members being suspended or laid off for breaking remote work rules. The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat says it does not gather information on those disciplinary measures.

As of 2024, 367,772 people were working in the federal public service.

MORE National ARTICLES

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat
An Air India flight made an emergency landing this morning in Nunavut following a security threat posted online. RCMP say Air India Flight 127 was en route from New Delhi to Chicago, but landed instead at the Iqaluit International Airport at 5:21 a.m.

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat

Port Hardy homicide targeted

Port Hardy homicide targeted
Police on Vancouver Island say the deadly assault of a man in Port Hardy last weekend appears to have been targeted. Port Hardy R-C-M-P say they responded to a report of an injured person on Sunday afternoon, and the person later died of their injuries in hospital. 

Port Hardy homicide targeted

No injuries in Langley plane crash

No injuries in Langley plane crash
Mounties say no one was hurt in a small plane crash in Langley on Thursday. R-C-M-P says officers along with ambulance services responded to a report of a possible plane crash yesterday afternoon.

No injuries in Langley plane crash

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages
They are some of the hundreds — possibly thousands — of Canadian line workers who have been called into service to help rebuild power grids after Helene and now Hurricane Milton have left millions of Americans in the dark.

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post
In a letter to the party and Surrey South candidate Brent Chapman, the association says a statement like the one he posted on Facebook nine years ago "promotes division and hate" and it's imperative he be asked to step down.

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel
The sentencing decision by B.C. provincial court Judge Reginald Harris says 31-year-old Anthony Woods must instead continue to live at a recovery home in the Interior for the first year of his two-year conditional sentence. 

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel