After almost 2 weeks of job action and 9 consecutive days at the table, enough progress was made that the committee decided it was time to let our members see what's on offer and have their say." — Stephanie Smith, BCGEU President
Victoria (08 Sept. 2022) — Following more than 7 months of negotiations and a historic job action that lasted almost 2 weeks, the BC General Employees' Union's (BCGEU/NUPGE) public service bargaining committee has reached a tentative agreement with the provincial government's Public Service Agency (PSA). This agreement covers 33,000 bargaining unit members working in direct government service.
Wage increases and protections the priority in bargaining
"The members of this bargaining unit have been clear from the day we started preparing for bargaining last fall that their top priorities were wage increases and meaningful wage protections, and our committee took that message to the PSA," said Stephanie Smith, BCGEU President and chair of the bargaining committee. "The 95% strike vote we got in June and actioned in August was our members' response to an offer that showed their employer had not gotten the message. After almost 2 weeks of job action and 9 consecutive days at the table, enough progress was made that the committee decided it was time to let our members see what's on offer and have their say."
The PSA invited the BCGEU/NUPGE back to the bargaining table in late August — more than 5 weeks after talks broke down in July — where both parties spent 9 straight days to reach a deal. "Bargaining is never easy, and this has been a long and challenging round," said Smith. "I'm proud of the work our committee has done, and I'm proud of the solidarity our members have shown over the last 8 months — especially the hundreds who walked picket lines at liquor and cannabis locations and the thousands who refused much-needed overtime as part of our job action."
Extensive consultation with members to set priorities
This tentative agreement is the result of almost a year of work by the BCGEU's bargaining committee and members of the bargaining unit. Last fall, the union conducted the most extensive consultation for public service negotiations in BCGEU/NUPGE history. Our members told us that they wanted a contract that offered wage increases and wage protections that address rising costs and that recognized the critical importance of robust public services and the workers that provide them.
Here are the highlights from the agreement: Public Service tentative agreement highlights.
Timelines for the ratification vote will be confirmed in the coming days.
NUPGE
The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 400,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good.
While our Components are located from coast to coast, the office of the National Union of Public and General Employees is situated on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabeg people and is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.
We recognize and acknowledge the crimes that have been committed and the harm that has been done.
And, we dedicate ourselves, as a union, to moving forward in partnership with Indigenous Peoples in a spirit of reconciliation and striving for justice. — NUPGE