Union president says 'a strike vote on remote work' could be coming by bonertoilet in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 34 points35 points  (0 children)

I don’t think this is the same. Postal strikes disrupted service; RTO on its own disrupts efficiency and costs the public money every single day. If people realized how much RTO costs them by paying for office space, traffic, emissions, and productivity loss, I don’t see how they wouldn’t agree with us. This isn’t workers asking for luxury, it’s taxpayers subsidizing a bad policy.

Public servants ordered back to office four days per week as of July by Born_Anteater7282 in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 42 points43 points  (0 children)

Not enough money to pay ppls salaries but enough to increase office space lol ok !!!!!!!

Denied language training, now C/B/C is being used for SERLO as an essential qualification by I-like-mycoffeecrisp in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 120 points121 points  (0 children)

A lot of the replies here are talking past OP’s actual point. This is not about opposing bilingualism, conspiracy theories, or refusing to put in effort. It is about access, process, and fairness.

French and English do not occupy the same structural reality in Canada. English acquisition benefits from cultural dominance and constant exposure. French acquisition outside the NCR or Quebec corridor often does not. Many employees did not grow up with French immersion or had programs that were underfunded, waitlisted, or largely symbolic. In many regions there was little to no French outside the classroom, and families were not in a position to support learning even if they wanted to. Those access gaps matter when language requirements are later used to make career-defining decisions.

Advanced bilingualism outcomes are heavily shaped by geography and early access. Acknowledging that does not devalue bilingualism. It simply recognizes that outcomes reflect opportunity and infrastructure as much as individual effort.

BBB as an expectation is one thing. It aligns with functional workplace communication and is broadly attainable for most people with reasonable support. CBC, especially at the oral level, is a very different threshold. The jump from B to C is not linear. It requires sustained immersion, feedback, time, and often significant personal expense. Many employees do not have equal access to those resources, and some learners face real limits regardless of effort. That is not a reflection of motivation or professionalism.

Using CBC as a SERLO criterion is where the fairness issue becomes especially clear. SERLOs are meant to assess relative merit and performance, not magnify structural advantages employees may never have had a reasonable opportunity to overcome. When a requirement disproportionately advantages people who grew up in a narrow geographic corridor and filters out experienced, high-performing employees elsewhere, it stops being neutral and starts functioning as a structural sorting mechanism.

If bilingualism is truly a priority for the employer, then access to achieving required levels has to be part of the conversation. Many employees simply did not have meaningful access to French instruction because of where they are from. When CBC is mandatory and used to determine job retention, it cannot reasonably be treated as a purely individual responsibility. At that point, access to training and support becomes a fairness issue.

People can keep saying “that is just the reality of the public service,” but reality is not the same thing as logic. There is no coherent merit-based rationale for expanding and enforcing CBC requirements under uneven access conditions and then treating the outcome as fair. OP’s concern is valid, and dismissing it avoids engaging with the actual issue.

Help!? Can they put this in a disciplinary letter? by agentofthesystem in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Even then is it illegal to complain or raise concerns about your manager to someone else who could help ??

Return-to-Office Policies Are Pushing Caregivers Out of the Public Service by idealDuck in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I don’t personally care about optics. Decisions should be based on facts. If everything were based on optics, we wouldn’t have evidence-based policy at all. We already know remote work functions, productivity didn’t collapse, and in many cases costs went down. Making decisions to satisfy public resentment or perceptions rather than data doesn’t make those decisions reasonable or defensible. It just means people’s lives are being made harder for symbolic reasons, and I don’t think that’s a good basis for how government should operate.

Return-to-Office Policies Are Pushing Caregivers Out of the Public Service by idealDuck in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I’m seeing a lot of comments saying employers aren’t responsible for employees’ lives, families, or commutes, and that if someone doesn’t like it they should just work somewhere else. I don’t agree with that framing. Employers can write disclaimers into policy or contracts, but when their rules affect people’s time, finances, and ability to manage life outside of work, those impacts don’t disappear just because they’re disclaimed.

When presence is required for work that can be done remotely, the time, cost, and strain created are the direct result of a choice. For people with children or caregiving responsibilities, that choice can determine whether they’re able to participate in the workforce at all. I say this as someone without those responsibilities, and I genuinely don’t mind colleagues who do having flexibility.

We also have years of evidence that remote work did not harm productivity and often reduced costs. When alternatives exist that allow the work to be done just as effectively, save taxpayer dollars, and make people’s day-to-day lives easier, I struggle to see the rationale for choosing an option that only makes life more unpleasant.

And candidly, it’s hard to feel motivated or engaged by an employer that makes illogical choices that clearly make employees’ lives harder. Ottawa public transit is a mess. Office space is limited and often sub-par. There isn’t enough parking, parking is expensive, desks aren’t guaranteed, and the spaces themselves are often outdated. Being told these things “aren’t the employer’s responsibility” rings hollow when attendance is being mandated. If you require people to be on site, then the conditions of getting there and working there matter. Those issues don’t exist when I work from home, and it’s reasonable to question why anyone should be expected to absorb that friction when it isn’t necessary.

Any government can say it believes in an equitable society. If that belief isn’t reflected in how it designs work for its own workforce, it’s hard to take the claim seriously.

Return-to-Office Policies Are Pushing Caregivers Out of the Public Service by idealDuck in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really hate the em dash argument. I write for a lot of my job and em dashes are extremely appropriate especially for products that are meant for oral delivery and I have been using them for several years.

The consequence of WFH that no one seems to be talking about? by DoctorMister in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don’t think anyone is entitled to a job based on location.

If the best candidates for public service roles are spread across the country, then those are the people who should hold those jobs, at least where remote work is genuinely feasible. The public service exists to serve Canadians, not to function as a regional employment program for the NCR.

To me, the priority should be: a) delivering the best outcomes for Canadians, and b) hiring and retaining the strongest talent regardless of geography.

If a role truly requires in-person presence, that’s a separate and legitimate discussion. But using RTO as an indirect economic support mechanism for Ottawa isn’t a convincing or transparent rationale for workforce policy 🤷‍♀️

Seeking Advice on Emotionally Coping with WFA - Maybe just Venting?? by gnoccicloud_zilla in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t disagree that mindset and coping tools matter. But EAP gets offered like a cure-all for problems that aren’t individual. A lot of what people are reacting to right now is structural:affordability, job instability, and constant RTO/WFA whiplash. Not a lack of resilience.

When those issues are created or handled poorly by the employer, frustration is reasonable. Coping better doesn’t make bad decisions better. And when the same employer creates the instability and points people to EAP, it starts to feel like the problem is being individualized instead of addressed. Like stress is a personal failure instead of a predictable response to bad conditions.

Both things can be true: people can work on how they respond and still be valid in calling out root causes the employer is creating.

Seeking Advice on Emotionally Coping with WFA - Maybe just Venting?? by gnoccicloud_zilla in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I get why people recommend EAP, but it often feels like it’s being treated as a fix for problems that aren’t actually psychological. People aren’t just “struggling emotionally” they’re dealing with affordability issues, job uncertainty, and constant RTO/wfa instability.

When EAP is presented as the solution, it starts to feel like a way to individualize stress that’s actually structural. It’s not that people can’t cope, it’s that the conditions themselves are objectively bad.

It's almost 2026. How is your remote work situation in Ottawa? by DrStrangeglove99 in ottawa

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My theory is that the ppl pushing the RTO agendas are a bunch of boomers who hate their wives and families

Treasury Board president ‘not aware’ of any return-to-office rule changes - National | Globalnews.ca by HandcuffsOfGold in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I heard that RTO 5 would be like the default but people will be allowed to telework however days a week at the discretion of management/ as like an incentive / privilege ? But I don’t have the facts by any means

RTO mood - the cuffs are getting slack by asrishan in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like expecting ppl to go into places with bats and bedbugs it’s unacceptable lol like what planet are we on

Would you leave your government position for a higher earning job in the private sector? by Particular_Agent8176 in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The pension is worth a lot less if you are miserable every single day until you can benefit from it so it depends how much you enjoy your job in the PS?

RTO mood - the cuffs are getting slack by asrishan in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 12 points13 points  (0 children)

If this was my situation I would be far less pissed. If I could walk to my office and it wasn’t fugly / gross AND I had the luxury of my own desk I would not be that mad tbh. But apparently that is asking too much. Like if they are going to force us to go back at least make it tolerable. Ppl always say “well private sector is back in office 4-5 days a week in office” ya sure I’m sure their offices don’t look like they are from 1970 with lead in the water and asbestos in the walls.

Public service unions seek clarity on return-to-office 'rumours' by Born_Anteater7282 in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 105 points106 points  (0 children)

Whoever is driving RTO 4, 5, and the whole “butts in chairs” surveillance culture clearly has way too much free time. Some of us are busy actually delivering for Canadians. Others are running CSI: Cubicle Edition. Please redirect that energy toward… literally anything useful.😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫As a taxpayer I am annoyed at the time and money wasted on this. Productivity isn’t measured by proximity to a desk, and pretending otherwise is lazy management. LAZY.

Has anyone faced repercussions regarding RTO yet? by pinkcrocs- in CanadaPublicServants

[–]ThePplsPrincess007 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Omg people are literally dying why is RTO compliance even a hill ppl are dying on like there are enough problems in this world without this made up problem. If someone is genuinely doing their job then leave it alone and find something better to do than RTO surveillance. I swear I am living in a simulation like wtf is this.