Thousands of government workers in Canada received official notices that they may lose their jobs or their jobs may change as the government acts on its budget cuts to save money. According to the Public Service Alliance of Canada, a workers’ union, 1775 1,775 workforce adjustment notices were issued to its members last week. The union said 2,273 members have received the notices since the federal budget was released in November.The union said public servants in Canada are being forced into a “Hunger Games-style fight for jobs”. The latest federal budget said the exercise will involve “restructuring operations and consolidating internal services.” It said it also will deploy workforce adjustments and attrition to return the size of the public service to “a more sustainable level”, the Canadian Press reported. The government plans to cut the number of public service jobs by about 40,000 from a peak of 368,000 in 2023-24. About 10,000 jobs have been eliminated already. The plan will see a reduction of 1,000 executive positions over the next two years. The federal government has sent letters with information on its planned early retirement program to almost 68,000 public servants who may be eligible.
Notice versus pink slip
Experts explained that not everyone receiving the notice that says their jobs could be in jeopardy will receive a pink slip but most of them will see their jobs change.
List of to-be affected departments/agencies
- Health Canada
- Canadian Museum of History and Canadian War Museum
- Public Services and Procurement Canada
- Treasury Board Secretariat
- Innovation, Science and Economic Development
- Shared Services Canada
- Statistics Canada
- Natural Resources Canada
- Public Service Commission of Canada
- Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada
- Department of Finance
Visa officers won’t be fired, says immigration minister
Immigration minister Lena Metlege Diab said federal employees processing applications from foreign nationals for temporary or permanent residence in Canada will be insulated from forthcoming public-service cuts. “The way IRCC has been funded over the years, it’s funded based on the levels plan, and so therefore that will not change. The people that are processing those numbers, they’ll still be there. They will not be affected,” the minister said.






