Ontario Premier Doug Ford is encouraging the province’s municipalities to have their public service employees return to the office five days a week.
“I want to thank Mayor Brown for his leadership, and encourage other municipalities to follow his lead,” Ford said at the conference.
While more than half of the province’s public servants are already required to attend the workplace full time, those who attend the office three days per week will start going to the office four days a week starting Oct. 20 as part of a “gradual transition period to the full time in-office standard,” Mulroney said.
The decision to have workers return full time reflects what the province is seeing in business across Ontario, Ford said at the Aug. 18 conference.
“The government has been closely monitoring the evolution of in-workplace standards for public and private sector organizations,” Mulroney said in her statement, adding that a five days per week in-workplace standard “represents the current workforce landscape” in the province.
“There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their businesses basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic,” Ford said, referring to Toronto businesses located by government buildings that took a hit because of pandemic-era remote work policies.
Meanwhile, the president of the union for Ontario’s professional employees pledged to fight the new policy and accused the province of using the policy to remove employees’ previously negotiated work-from-home rights.
3-Day-a-Week Federal Mandate
Last year in May, the federal government announced a three-day-a-week in-office mandate for public servants, and said government departments had to implement the policy by Sept. 9, 2024.The government said the move would put confidence back into its services and establish a consistent approach to hybrid work. Additionally, the policy would attract talent, meet diversity, inclusion, and accessibility objectives, and develop a public service culture of excellence, the government said.
Estimated compliance rates in various departments at the time included 60 percent in the department of national defence, 80 percent in the Canada Revenue Agency, 75 percent in Employment and Social Development Canada, 93 percent in Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, and 60 percent in the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
While a Treasury Board document indicates that penalties for violating the in-office mandate could include verbal reprimand, written reprimand, suspension without pay, and termination of employment, the PSAC said it had not heard of any members being suspended or laid off for breaking the rules.







