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PAFSO Responds to Government's Rejection of Arbitration

chengcheng168

Full Member
May 30, 2012
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26 July 2013 - Statement by the Professional Association of Foreign Service Officers: PAFSO Responds to Government's Rejection of Arbitration
Shortly before noon today, PAFSO received a letter from the President of the Treasury Board in which he rejected our offer of binding arbitration. Minister Clement’s decision was based on the grounds that PAFSO would not accept all six of the preconditions he wanted to impose on the arbitration process.

The Canadian public must understand two key facts:
1. Two of Treasury Board’s preconditions were so paralyzing that their acceptance would have predetermined the outcome of arbitration in the Government’s favour and negated the purpose and integrity of the process. Specifically, they wanted to exclude from consideration any mention of other professional groups in government who perform the same work as us – often in neighbouring offices – which has been at the heart of our position since day one.

2. PAFSO made a reasonable and responsible effort at finding common ground by accepting two of the six preconditions, and committing to a goodwill gesture – a suspension of service withdrawals while arbitration is ongoing – which would have satisfied a third.

Let us be clear: PAFSO has not rejected binding arbitration. We offered it in the first place. We agreed to pursue it even with three of Treasury Board’s preconditions. This offer still stands.

If Minister Clement truly believes his offer is “fair and reasonable”, he would not have shied away from arbitration without preconditions. Rather, he would have welcomed the opportunity to submit his offer to independent scrutiny. Instead, he sought to stack the deck in his favour by cherry-picking criteria which would have favoured Treasury Board’s position. He is trying to tilt the playing field to the Government’s advantage, and is clearly uninterested in a fair contest.

The Government has reached tentative agreements in two other long-outstanding contract negotiations during the last month, and will return to the table on Monday to address a third. PAFSO is one of the smallest unions in the federal government. Equal pay for our members could be achieved for $4.2 million – 1.5% of the impact this strike is having on the tourism sector alone. PAFSO can only conclude that the Government is behaving prejudicially toward the Foreign Service and is therefore negotiating in bad faith. This should be of serious concern to all Canadians.

Effective Monday, in order to persuade the Government that binding arbitration remains the responsible way forward to resolve our dispute, PAFSO members will withdraw all services until further notice at Canada’s fifteen largest visa processing centres abroad: Abu Dhabi, Ankara, Beijing, Cairo, Delhi/Chandigarh, Hong Kong, London, Manila, Mexico City, Moscow, Paris, Riyadh, Sao Paulo, and Shanghai.

We take no pleasure whatsoever in these strike actions and their real, severe, and mounting effects on the Canadian economy. But it should now be evident to all Canadians that from this point forward the Government of Canada bears sole and complete responsibility for these impacts. PAFSO has made every reasonable effort to resolve this situation; the Government has not. PAFSO encourages all individuals, businesses, and industry associations with a stake in the outcome of our dispute to intervene with the Government and urge them to bargain freely and flexibly with their own employees.

PAFSO’s recent exchanges with Treasury Board are below for background.
 

Dan_from_Surrey

Hero Member
Nov 5, 2010
485
23
124
Surrey BC
Category........
Visa Office......
Manila
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
19-09-2012
Doc's Request.
Submitted with app
AOR Received.
Sponsorship approval 24-10-12
File Transfer...
24-10-12
Med's Request
Meds received 1-11-12
Med's Done....
15-08-2012 - Meds re-done 24-10-2013
Interview........
NA
Passport Req..
04-06-2013 DM 04-11-13
VISA ISSUED...
11-12-2013
LANDED..........
22-11-2013!
gongdi said:
By "all services" do they really mean completely stop working altogether? :eek:
Yes the next logical steps are for the Government to lock them out, so they can not enter the buildings. And/Or deem them essential services and get court orders ruling them back to work. At this point if they where ordered back, under essential service rules, expect things to move at an absolute crawl.

Right now given this governments disposition, I would expect to see injunctions of some form against the unions strike lines. Although the rules would very by jurisdiction, I am sure. Some countries may be more open to public labour action protests (picket lines) on the sidewalks outside the embassies some may not.

Right now I would lean towards seeing the injunctions, and Management and exempt staff moved into postilion to process as many economic visa's (business,advanced education, and visitor) and family class immigration pushed to the very back of the que. Unless it is for a big shot, then it would get handled outside the regular stream of applications.

Just my opinion, as a member of my local union exec, and a experienced labour council member and as an experienced negotiating committee member.
 

PMM

VIP Member
Jun 30, 2005
25,494
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Hi


Dan_from_Surrey said:
Yes the next logical steps are for the Government to lock them out, so they can not enter the buildings. And/Or deem them essential services and get court orders ruling them back to work. At this point if they where ordered back, under essential service rules, expect things to move at an absolute crawl.

Right now given this governments disposition, I would expect to see injunctions of some form against the unions strike lines. Although the rules would very by jurisdiction, I am sure. Some countries may be more open to public labour action protests (picket lines) on the sidewalks outside the embassies some may not.

Right now I would lean towards seeing the injunctions, and Management and exempt staff moved into postilion to process as many economic visa's (business,advanced education, and visitor) and family class immigration pushed to the very back of the que. Unless it is for a big shot, then it would get handled outside the regular stream of applications.

Just my opinion, as a member of my local union exec, and a experienced labour council member and as an experienced negotiating committee member.
I some how doubt that the issuance of visas are an essential service and wouldn't be declared as such by the Treasury Board.
 

Dan_from_Surrey

Hero Member
Nov 5, 2010
485
23
124
Surrey BC
Category........
Visa Office......
Manila
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
19-09-2012
Doc's Request.
Submitted with app
AOR Received.
Sponsorship approval 24-10-12
File Transfer...
24-10-12
Med's Request
Meds received 1-11-12
Med's Done....
15-08-2012 - Meds re-done 24-10-2013
Interview........
NA
Passport Req..
04-06-2013 DM 04-11-13
VISA ISSUED...
11-12-2013
LANDED..........
22-11-2013!
True enough, the issuance of our visas is definitely not an essential service, move that to trade ministers and delegations that want to come to Canada to talk, athletes, big shot etc then it changes. For you and I, we are the least of their concerns.

But PFASO doesn't only handle just visas, the scope of the work they do is far more broad range. and if they are not working, then a lot of other government services aboard suffer as well. Visa's are only one small piece of the picture, and out family class visa's are an even smaller part of that.