Treasury Board agrees to negotiate better birth control coverage for public service employees

Fellow members,

After years of advocacy, the Treasury Board has agreed to negotiate the addition of non-oral contraceptives to the Public Service Health Care Plan (PSHCP). Currently, only oral contraceptives (the birth control pill) are covered. Along with other federal public sector unions, PIPSC has long argued that it is discriminatory for oral contraceptives only to be covered under our health plan. The change announced today speaks to what it means to have women lead the two largest federal bargaining agents. Neither of us could let this wrong continue, and we worked together to get it fixed. Our members will soon be able to choose the birth control method best suited to their needs.

PIPSC is very pleased that this long-standing injustice will finally be corrected, as it goes back many years. In 2012, bargaining agents signed an agreement to cover non-oral contraceptives but former Treasury Board President Tony Clement rejected the deal, and instead unilaterally booked $7.4 billion in savings from the health plan.

This is the beginning of the righting of this wrong, and we will continue to advocate for monies be put back into the Plan and for coverage to be extended to meet our members’ changing needs.

PIPSC, along with other unions, is in the process of negotiating with the Treasury Board a host of improvements to the PSHCP. We will be surveying members on their priorities, so please stay tuned.

As always, please feel free to share your priorities with me at president@pipsc.ca.

Better Together!

Debi Daviau
President


6 June 2017
Next week, June 11-17, is National Public Service Week (NPSW). Since 1992 it’s been an occasion to recognize and celebrate the contributions Canada’s public service professionals make to society. The Professional Institute supports this celebration of our members’ accomplishments. In fact, we first proposed it.

2 June 2017
“Today’s update by Deputy Minister Lemay indicates that the government has again failed to plan ahead -- this time for entirely predictable increases in the numbers of employee payroll adjustments needed to implement new collective agreements,” said PIPSC Vice President Steve Hindle.

26 May 2017
The announcement this week that the federal government will temporarily hire an additional 200 staff, invest a further $142 million over three years, and introduce even more measures to expedite fixing Phoenix is welcome, if long overdue, news.

5 May 2017
After defending literally hundreds of individual member grievances related to the Phoenix pay system and lobbying the government for many months with no permanent fix in sight, PIPSC has today filed policy

5 May 2017
To our members in the Manitoba Association of Government Engineers (MAGE) and Deer Lodge Centre (DLC) Groups,