Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vaccine could be condition of federal employment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2021 04:25 PM
  • Vaccine could be condition of federal employment

OTTAWA - Even federal employees who work from home will have to be vaccinated to keep their jobs if the government's draft mandatory-vaccine policy stands, according to one union executive.

Stéphane Aubry, vice-president of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC), says the draft, as well as other communication between unions and the government, suggests that the Treasury Board is leaning toward making vaccination a condition of employment.

He says that would mean workers would need to be fully vaccinated, even if they work from home or outside of the country.

PIPSC represents 60,000 members, mainly scientists and professionals employed by the federal government, as well as some provincial and territorial workers.

"If it was more based on the type of work, then it could have been more granular and be more specific to those that are frontline workers, that are requested to go back to the office," Aubry said in an interview Tuesday.

"Making it a condition of employment would apply to everybody, independent of where they are physically working from."

The Canadian Press has not seen the draft policy or verified its contents.

In a statement, the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat would only say that officials have been working on plans to implement the requirement for vaccines across the public service and engaging with bargaining agents and other stakeholders.

The government announced its intention to mandate vaccines for the federal workforce on Aug 13.

After the election, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it would be a priority of his re-elected Liberal government.

“The public service and the unions have been working on that over the past number of weeks,” Trudeau said at a press conference on Sept. 28.

The final policy will subject to government approval.

Aubry said unions are pushing to find out what kind of accommodations could be made for unvaccinated workers, particularly those who cannot receive a shot for COVID-19.

They also want to know what will happen to those who choose not to comply.

"Disciplinary loss of salary, loss of jobs, we're concerned it could go that way," he said. "And for those that have a reason, how will they provide those reasons that they cannot be vaccinated?"

Simply making COVID-19 vaccines a condition of employment would not cover contractors or visitors in federal workplaces either, he said.

Several unions have raised concerns about how the government intends to verify employee vaccine status, and Aubry said he also wants to know how that confidential health information will be stored.

"It would not be the only organization that do capture private information, so we expect that they will have procedures behind that," he said.

Public-service unions have been allowed to provide feedback on the draft and a final version is expected soon.

All bargaining agents can do for now is advocate on behalf of their members while the government finesses the final draft. Only after the policy is finalized can the unions file a grievance if they don't feel their workers are fairly treated.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.
RCMP are investigating the death of a child who sustained serious injuries at a campground in southeast British Columbia earlier this week. They say officers responded along with the provincial ambulance service on Monday to a report of an unresponsive child at a campground east of Creston.    

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.

671 COVID19 cases for Friday

671 COVID19 cases for Friday
There are 5,872 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 160,268 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 215 individuals are in hospital and 118 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

671 COVID19 cases for Friday

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated
Dr. Steven Fedder, who works in the emergency room of a hospital in Richmond, B.C., said he has run out of patience for people whose stance against vaccines has larger societal implications.    

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated

O'Toole, Singh target Trudeau over election call

O'Toole, Singh target Trudeau over election call
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau is finding himself under fire this morning from his political opponents over the timing of an election call during the fourth wave of COVID-19. Trudeau triggered the election three weeks ago, and it wraps on Sept. 20.    

O'Toole, Singh target Trudeau over election call

Lawsuit seeks Canada-wide drug decriminalization

Lawsuit seeks Canada-wide drug decriminalization
The statement of claim filed Tuesday by the Canadian Association of People Who Use Drugs and four individual plaintiffs says drug dependence is well recognized as a medical condition, but criminalization means the toxic illicit market is the only source of most drugs.

Lawsuit seeks Canada-wide drug decriminalization

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says indoor gatherings are now restricted to only one other family or five guests, while outdoor gatherings are limited to 50 people.

New COVID-19 restrictions in north B.C.