Canada

11785 readers
525 users here now

What's going on Canada?



Related Communities


🍁 Meta


🗺️ Provinces / Territories


🏙️ Cities / Local Communities

Sorted alphabetically by city name.


🏒 Sports

Baseball

Basketball

Curling

Hockey

Soccer


💻 Schools / Universities

Sorted by province, then by total full-time enrolment.


💵 Finance, Shopping, Sales


🗣️ Politics


🍁 Social / Culture


Rules

  1. Keep the original title when submitting an article. You can put your own commentary in the body of the post or in the comment section.

Reminder that the rules for lemmy.ca also apply here. See the sidebar on the homepage: lemmy.ca


founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
2851
 
 

Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

Text of the article at the time of posting:

Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

Premier Doug Ford's government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

It's a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must "increase their attendance to four days per week" starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday. 

Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office. 

"How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can't. You've got to look at them eye to eye," Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies

"There's hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren't seeing the flow of traffic."

The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada's big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall. 

'Everyone needs to go back to work,' says Ford

Ford said his government wasn't influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he'd spoken with agree "everyone needs to go back to work." 

"We look forward to having everyone back; we're very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day," he said.

Ontario's top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision "is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors."

The province's move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service. 

The province was "hellbent on removing" employees' options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer. 

"I am incensed by this morning's announcement," said Bulmer in a message to union members. "We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere." 

Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday. 

The provincial government's single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years. 

Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city's downtown. 

Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There's been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mike Crawley

Senior reporter

Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

With files from Sarah Petz

2852
2853
 
 

"One of the many routes for Canadian arms is through the United States loophole: Canadian-made deadly munitions and components are exported to the US, which are then transferred to Israel as military aid. By shipping arms to the US to be assembled into fighter jets, attack helicopters, and other deadly weapons systems that are actively massacring Palestinians in Gaza, Canada evades arms trade regulations and circumvents its responsibilities as a state party to the Arms Trade Treaty."

2854
 
 

Not quite up and running yet.

2855
2856
2857
 
 

I made the biggest political donation of my life after this policy was announced - and sent a screenshot to my (barely elected) UCP MLA letting him know. There's a lot to hate the UCP for, but this one really takes the cake.

2858
 
 

If Canada rerouted some fighter jet funding to churning out squadrons of water bombers, this country could contribute substantially to the global war against wildfires

2859
0
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by patatas@sh.itjust.works to c/canada@lemmy.ca
 
 

Bill C-5, Indigenous resistance, and the authoritarian turn at the heart of the settler state

2860
2861
2862
2863
2864
2865
2866
2867
 
 
2868
2869
2870
 
 

Scroll down for a questionnaire

2871
2872
2873
2874
 
 

I dunno. It's like Carney's "we're gonna build 500k houses a year without a plan trust me bro just elect me bro" strategy is not effective.

But on the plus side, it looks like existing homeowners won't have to worry about the price of houses going down. /s

The federal government is under pressure to relax the foreign homebuyer ban, as builders deal with one of the worst real estate slowdowns in decades.

...

At the time, the federal government said it would help stabilize housing and ensure Canadians had more access to purchasing homes. The policy prevents foreigners from buying existing and preconstruction homes.

But as borrowing costs increased in 2022 and 2023, the real estate market slumped, and demand dried up for preconstruction homes. Sales have dropped significantly in the regions of Toronto, Vancouver and Ottawa. And over the past few years, developers have postponed and canceled projects because they are unable to sell the minimum amount needed to obtain construction financing from lenders.

Okay, at least one of the other recommendations is good:

The alliance is also recommending that the federal government expand and speed up the approval process of its $55-billion apartment construction loan program. It provides cheap loans to developers to build rental-only housing as long as specific affordability requirements are met.

...

The letter also urges Ottawa to provide the GST waiver on new rental-only buildings for projects currently under construction. The tax break, which was announced in September, 2023, does not apply to projects that started prior to that date.

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-foreign-homebuying-ban-ottawa-pressure/

2875
 
 

What province? Alberta, of course

view more: ‹ prev next ›