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Open Letter to Reg Alcock
December 12, 2003
The Honourable Reg Alcock
President of the Treasury Board
L'Esplanade Laurier, 9th Floor
140 O'Connor Street
Ottawa , Ontario K1A 0R5
Dear Mr. Alcock:
I want, first of all, to congratulate you on your appointment to
the presidency of the Treasury Board, and to assure you that the
members of the PSAC employed by the government of Canada want to
work with you to ensure that the government delivers a full range
of services to the Canadian public.
The PSAC and our members who are directly employed by the government
of Canada were surprised to learn that the government has divided
its management responsibilities into three departments and agencies
under three separate Ministers. While we have yet to comprehend
the logic of the decision, we nonetheless need to address issues
related to program review and financial accountability within the
federal public sector. In addition, we also need to address
with you, on an urgent basis, the transfer of responsibilities for
collective bargaining and public service modernization to the department
of the Public Works and Government Services and the Privy Council.
With regard to program review, I must raise with you a serious and
evolving concern within our membership over your government's commitment
to a process that has failed in the past. We are seriously
concerned over the potential impact on federal public sector workers,
the delivery of services to Canadians from coast to coast to coast.
As I said in a December 3, 2003 letter to Paul Martin who was sworn
in as Prime Minister earlier today:
“In the light of your announcement before the Montreal Board
of Trade that program review, as outlined in the 2003 federal budget,
will become an ongoing and continuous part of the government's planning
cycle, I, and many of the PSAC members who have communicated with
me over the past few weeks, fear that your government is on the
verge of repeating the mistakes of the 1990s. Our members take this
position, because “program review” as announced in the 2003 budget
was constructed as a specific financial target—$1 billion per year—regardless
of its consequential impact on the delivery of service. In fact,
and on the basis of its implementation in the mid 1990s and again
this year, “program review” is a misnomer. What has happened in
the past is that the Minister of Finance and/or the President of
the Treasury Board announce expenditure restraint of a specific
dollar amount and departments and agencies are told to reduce expenditures
by their share of the cut. In short, little, if any, attention is
paid to the “review” part of the process. This has given rise to
speculation within our membership that program review will, once
again, disrupt service to the public and the lives of thousands
of federal workers.”
In light of the above, I would like, on behalf of the PSAC, to request
a meeting on an urgent basis to deal with the transfer of Treasury
Board responsibilities to Public Works and Government Services and
the Privy Council. In addition, I would urge you, as the
President of Treasury Board, Minister with direct responsibility
for program review and financial accountability and the Chair of
the new Expenditure Review Committee of the Cabinet, to initiate
a comprehensive consultation process with the PSAC prior to the
development of the 2004 federal budget and main estimates.
Sincerely,
Nycole Turmel
National President
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