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Manitoba

Manitoba's inability to freeze pay of public sector workers now costing province in retroactive wages

The Manitoba government's bid to freeze the wages of public-sector workers backfired and now it's costing the province financially.

$217M for nurses, as much as $157M for teachers as government plays catch-up after unable to freeze wages

Manitoba nurses received more than $215 million last December in retroactive pay, after four and a half years without a pay increase. For years, the government tried to force all public sector employees to two years of wage freezes. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The Manitoba government's bid to freeze the wages of public-sector workers backfired and now it's costing the province financially.

As a result of new collective agreements that ignored the wishes of the Progressive Conservative government, several employee groups are entitled to years of retroactive wages.

After going 4 years without a contract, Manitobanurses recently collected $216.7 million in owed wages, dating back to 2017, the province said.

Cash-strapped school divisions are receiving$80 million thisyear and $77 million next year from the province to cope with financial pressures primarily, pay increasesthey cannot handle on their own.

And Manitoba Hydro spent $14 millionon a labour dispute stemming from its refusal to payfront-line workers more, yet the labour board decided to boost their wages anyway.

The province initially tried to limit these types of costs throughlegislation, passed in 2017,that mandated two years of wage freezes for public sector workers.

Pay freeze law cast a chill

Though it was neverproclaimed into law, their unions saygovernment negotiatorsacted as thoughthe legislationwas. It cast a chill on contract talks, with someemployers refusing to entertain pay increases.

While some new contracts adhering to two years of stagnant paywerereached anyway, many agreements were settledwith an outside party that disregarded the legislation, or the wage pattern set by them.

FletcherBaragar, an associate professor of economics at the University of Manitoba, argues the Toriesmade a mistake trying toenforce wage freezes, first through legislation and later through mandates.

There's "the incidental costs of just having to contest this through the courtsand the ill will that the dispute undoubtedly carries with it," Baragar said.

He said the government is now coping with paying years of retroactive wages in some cases, while enduring aCOVID-19 pandemic thatplunged the province's deficit to a record $2.1 billion.

Fletcher Baragar, University of Manitoba associate economics professor, said the government's attempt to freeze wages had a detrimental effect on workforce morale and resulted in a costly court fight. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"The government was in a relatively good financial fiscal position prior to the pandemic. That would have been a time whenit would have been easier for them"to foot the bill, he said.

Baragar thinks increasing inflation will come up during still-unresolved contract negotiations, some years in the making, such as talks with the Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals on behalf ofmore than 6,000 members.

"The window of low and stable price [increases] have, I think, been left behind," he said.

The push for wage freezes had far-reachingnegative effects, Baragar said, with employees feeling underappreciated and the employer potentially finding it tougher to retain those employees and hire new ones.

School divisions werestretched thin financially even before teachers won a pay bump, said Alan Campbell, Manitoba School Boards Association president.

Some divisions previously told CBC News theydidn't budget for any increases, following the direction of the province.

The provincial funding announced thus far to cover the wage increases that staff deserve may not be enough for most school divisions, whichfaced years of underfunding, Campbell said in an interview last week.

A woman with short brown hair in a leather jacket stands against a brick wall.
Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson said the government shouldn't attempt to freeze the wages of public-sector workers again. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson said the government should never try to short-change public workers again.

The nurses' previous contract expired on March 31, 2017. A newseven-year dealwith general wage increases that total9.6 per cent before compoundingwas ratified last October, after seven weeks of mediation.

"MNU fought long and hard for a new collective agreement. One fruit of that labour was retro (earned pay) and although we have heard from [Health] Minister Gordonthat expediting nurse back pay is a priority, we still have members who are without, waiting months," Jackson said in a statement.

The government told CBC News last monththe vast majority of nurses received a lump sum payment last December, aside from afew exceptionsrelated to a different payroll system.

Government repeals legislation

In 2020, the government-mandatedwage freeze was struck down in court as a"draconian measure," but the Manitoba Court of Appeal overturned the decision lastOctober.

The Progressive Conservative government, however, decided to repeal the bill anyway, as new premier Heather Stefanson reversed one of the biggest decisions of her predecessor, Brian Pallister.

Baragarsaid the negative effectsof previous bargaining talks likely lingers to this day.

He acknowledged that paying retroactive wages is a "part of the reality" for major government-funded employers dealing with sometimes a number of collective agreements.

The government did not respond to a request for comment regarding its actions that led to significant back pay,but said in a statement the many years where nurses didn't have a contractis an "exceptional case." It said it spent part of its time restructuring the number of health-care bargaining units. The nurses, however, havelong argued the province wasn't prioritizing their contract.