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Spoke in the House of Commons on Bill C-5
On September 21, 2016, Alice Wong spoke in the House of Commons on Bill C-5, An Act to repeal Division 20 of Part 3 of the Economic Action Plan 2015 Act, No. 1:
The following is a transcript:
Hon. Alice Wong (Richmond Centre, CPC):
Madam Speaker, I applaud my colleague’s attempt to let us know what the true picture is in our public service.
I have been consulting a lot in the private sector lately about the need for productivity and to create more jobs and to make sure that the government spends money wisely.
Many of the small and medium-sized business people in my riding said that they want to make sure that there is productivity in their workplace.
We can look at all the benefits public servants are getting. They are banking all those sick days, 114.7 million sick leave days. Those will be paid, and have been paid, by private sector taxpayers.
How do you justify having only the public sector benefiting and reaping all the good benefits while the private sector is sacrificing?
The Assistant Deputy Speaker (Mrs. Carol Hughes):
I just remind the hon. member to address the questions to the chair.
Hon. Pierre Poilievre:
Madam Speaker, I thank the member, the former minister, for her question.
I think this is the balance the previous government and the current government are trying to strike, which is between respect for taxpayers, that is, the private sector, as the member refers to it, and public servants in delivering a sick leave and short-term disability program that is there for public servants when they need it and is affordable for the taxpayers who are paying all the bills.
I am hopeful that the President of the Treasury Board continues with a mandate for his officials to achieve that balance, because there are better ways. We have right now a system in which younger public servants, or those new to the federal public service, do not even have enough sick leave days to get through to a short-term disability plan if, God forbid, they fall terribly ill.
Our previous government had attempted to rectify that problem by extending short-term disability through a fairer, balanced, and affordable regime. I think the current government has picked up that approach and hopefully is making progress with its partners and the bargaining agent to achieve something that will work for both taxpayers and employees.
Filed under: Parliament, Video