News
Latest news
The PSAC-UTE bargaining team met to review their proposals and discuss priorities in preparation for bargaining with the Canada Revenue Agency. The team will have a complete package ready to present when negotiations begin on January 11, 2022.
Each year on December 10, we celebrate the adoption of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a ground-breaking document recognizing that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.”
73 years later, the fight for human rights is far from over, and Canada continues to fall short. Indigenous, Black, racialized, LGBTQ2+ communities, women, gender-diverse people, and people with disabilities continue to experience human rights violations.
PSAC and Treasury Board have reached an agreement to lift the moratorium on the automatic cash-out of vacation and compensatory leave for the PA, TC, EB, SV and FB groups.
A new campaign from the Nunavut Employees Union and PSAC calls on the territory’s largest employer to support more than 4,000 public service workers by providing stable jobs, fair wages, and a northern allowance that keeps up with rising costs.
On December 6, 1989, 14 young women were killed at l’École Polytechnique in Montreal simply for being women.
For hundreds of thousands of Canadians, living with a disability often means living in poverty.
The PSAC Education Program is excited to release a new online course – Understanding your Collective Agreement.
For over two decades, PSAC has been the union of choice for university sector workers.
In 2016, Alberta’s NDP government amended the Post-Secondary Learning Act to allow academic workers to unionize.
Warning – descriptions of sexual and racial harassment may be triggering for some readers
As bargaining heats up this winter for 120,000 federal public service workers, it can be easy to forget why we should pay attention to this round of negotiations.
- ‹ previous
- 52 of 108
- next ›