Public servants express 'zero faith' in Phoenix damages claims process after long waits - Action News
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Public servants express 'zero faith' in Phoenix damages claims process after long waits

Federal public servants say they're frustrated andhave lost faith in the compensation process set up to acknowledge their severe financial and personal hardships due to the government's troubled pay system.

Some still waiting for money to compensate for severe hardships

A public servant holds a sign imploring Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resolve problems with the Phoenix pay system during a protest in October 2017. One public servant says he's lost faith in the Liberal government to fix Phoenix as he waits to be compensated for damages. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Federal public servants say they're frustrated and have lost faith in the compensation process set up to acknowledge their severe financial andpersonal hardships due to the government's troubled pay system.

Some employees say they're still affectedby the Phoenix pay system, introduced more than six years ago, whichhas overpaid, underpaid and failed to pay many federal employees since.

The government then agreed to pay eligible employees $2,500 in general damages due to Phoenixas part of its 2019 and 2020 damages agreements with various unions.

CBC spoke with several current and former public servants, including some who did not want to speakpublicly, who expressed frustrations over long wait times for compensationand delayed communications from the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat's claims team.

"Ican't plan,I can't assume that I'm actually going to ever get paid from the government for what's owed to me," saidGrant Dyck, a now-retired tax account examiner who has experiencedpay discrepancies since he took various higher-paying acting roles at Canada Revenue Agency, as well asa disability leave, back in 2017.

"Now we're talking about six to six and a half yearslater, without compensation."

I can't assume that I'm actually going to ever get paid.- Grant Dyck, retired public servant

In late 2021, the federal government announced another claims process to which thePublic Service Alliance of Canada the largest union of federal public servants in the country said it's going to be watchful the government doesn't "dilly-dally."

The union said it couldn't respond to CBC's request for comment by publishing time.

Employees became eligible to start applying for more compensationif they endured severe financial and personal hardships like losing their homes, ruined credit ratings, or developingtrauma or mental health issues due to Phoenix.

Dyck, who retired in 2019 with a disability, saidhis pension amount every month remains unstable due to Phoenix miscalculations. He saidthe calculations for his best five years was "messed up" due to the random under- and over-payments he received due to Phoenix.

"To best of my knowledge, I cannot fathom what I should be paid, what is due to me, or what I owe the government," said Dyck, whoaudited payrolls as part of his government job.

"And I did that professionally for five years. So it's that confusing."

WATCH | Former CRA payroll auditor says he can't even figure out Phoenix money trail:

Former CRA auditor says even he cannot fathom way out of Phoenix mess

2 years ago
Duration 0:48

Though hequalified for the $2,500 general damages claim, he said he still hasn't seen that money. A letter from the government says his payment date was Feb. 2, 2022, more than four months ago.

Dyck submitted another claim under the anguish category. He suffers from anxiety and depressionand saidPhoenix compounded his illness.

He applied for this claim in Decemberand saidhe's now waiting six months with no end in sight.

"They're just dragging their heels over this," said Dyck.

Reliving the trauma via claims process

Another former public servant saidhe expects to "fight aggressively" for his damage claims just as he's battled for themoney Phoenix has clawed back from him over the years.

Thisemployee, who worked forInnovation, Science and Economic DevelopmentCanada before leaving in 2018, describesa yearlong depression in 2019 as a result of Phoenix issues. He saidthe government kept clawing back pay he was owed,even though he already paid back $8,254.25in overpayments.

The claims process is, I suppose,like the rest [of] the Phoenix fiasco.- Howard Blinn, former public servant

"The anxiety built and built and built and I eventually self-admitted myself to [the] psychiatric ward," said the employee,who CBC agreed not to name as he feared speaking publicly about his mental health would impact his reputation.

"My doctor had me on a suicide watch. Heinsisted that he either see me or talk to me weekly. And my family was terrified."

He applied for damages for mentalhardships in January. After hearing "nothing" from the secretariat, the former public servant said he got "fed up" and went to his local MP for help.

Shortly after, he heard from the secretariat to submit relevant documents.

He saidit's exhausting reliving the trauma through all the doctor'snotes, correspondence and pay stubs he's putting together for the claim.

"I'm predicting that after I submit this documentation, I'll have to go back to my member of Parliament, become aggressive with [the] process itself, and push," he said.

"If I did not go to my [MP], my file wouldn't have been actioned I have zero faith. And from what I have experienced, I'm going to have to keep putting pressure on."

The Phoenix pay system has cost taxpayers $2.4 billion as of April 2022. Some who've applied for damages due to severe hardships say they're frustrated waiting months and years for the process to go through. (Ron Ward/The Canadian Press)

Howard Blinn, who used to work withthe Canadian Coast Guard in Halifax,said Phoenix issues have haunted him since 2016.

He applied for damages in December and is still waiting.

"The claims process is, I suppose,like the rest [of] the Phoenix fiasco," he wrote to CBC. "I don't have any faith in the Liberal [government] to fix this anytime soon."

Half of claims resolved, says TBS

The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat said in an emailed statement it doesn't comment on specific cases.

Spokesperson Martin Potvin wrote that depending on the complexity of the claim, it could take up to "several months" to process.

Potvin saidnearly 94 per cent of general damages claims have been resolved. Since the launch of the latest claims program in late 2021, almost 800 of 1,623 claims for severe damages just under half have been resolved, he added.