May 23, 2024
Canada Revenue Agency, union reach deal to end strike | CBC News

Canada Revenue Agency, union reach deal to end strike | CBC News

The public-sector union representing Canada Revenue Agency employees has struck a tentative deal with the federal government, ending a strike of 35,000 workers just after the tax season wrapped up.

The announcement of a prospective agreement comes after the government and Public Service Alliance of Canada came to separate deals that ended a strike of more than 120,000 other public servants.

CRA employees represented by PSAC’s Union of Taxation Employees were still on strike two days after the federal tax-filing deadline.

“Finally, we can say that we got a decent contract for our members, and they deserve it,” Marc Brière, national president of the Union of Taxation Employees, told CBC News.

The union is telling members to return to work on May 4 by 11:30 a.m. ET at the latest.

In a statement, PSAC said the tentative deal includes wage increases totalling 12.6 per cent compounded over the life of the agreement from 2021-2024.

The tentative agreement also includes a pensionable $2,500 one-time lump sum payment that represents an additional 3.6 per cent of salary for the average member.

A group of people on a sidewalk holding signs.
Canada Revenue Agency workers in Ottawa on a picket line at the Canada Post building on Heron Road early Monday morning. (Mateo Garcie-Tremblay/Radio-Canada)

In its own release, the CRA said it and PSAC reached a tentative settlement on telework outside of the collective agreement. It said both agreed to undertake a review of the directive on virtual work arrangements, and to create a panel to advise the commissioner and deputy commissioner of the CRA regarding employee concerns.

The union threatened earlier Wednesday that it would plan to send its members to disrupt a Liberal party convention in Ottawa on Thursday if the employer didn’t table a “fair” deal.

The separate agreement that PSAC negotiated with the government included pay increases totalling 12.6 per cent compounded over four years, and a one-time, pensionable lump sum payment of $2,500.

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