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Following the legalization of cannabis on October 17, 2018, employers across the country have rolled out policies on drug use.
PSAC’s bargaining team representing members at the CFIA held a second bargaining session for a new collective agreement between March 26 and 28.
PSAC members have long benefited from discounts on a number of products and services, but as of April 2nd, members will have many additional options to save as part of our new partnership with Unio
For the first time in PSAC’s history, representatives of every bargaining unit of university workers were invited to take part in a university roundtable, which took place in Ottawa from March 25 t
With a low GDP to debt ratio, and a manageable deficit, this government had the opportunity to invest in making life better for everyone.
PSAC only saw small movement from the government despite a rapidly closing window for Prime Minister Trudeau to deliver on his commitment to public service workers.
Right now, Research Assistants at Queen’s University in Kingston are working to achieve their first collective agreement.
With over 140,000 PSAC members at the bargaining table with the Trudeau government, PSAC President Chris Aylward and Vice-President Magali Picard are currently doing a cross-country mobilization to
The latest version (2019) of the PSAC publication, “Retiring from the Public Service of Canada: Some Useful Tips” is now available.
On March 21, 1960, sixty-nine people were killed and 180 were wounded after police opened fire at a peaceful demonstration in Sharpeville, South Africa, against the apartheid “pass laws.” A few yea
PSAC welcomes the new funding commitments made in today’s budget to address the Phoenix pay disaster, but they fall significantly short of what is required to end the pay nightmares of Canada’s fed
Negotiations with Parks Canada continued at a slow pace
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