Federal workforce in the Ottawa area continues to grow - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:50 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Federal workforce in the Ottawa area continues to grow

The National Capital Region's public service ranks sat north of 130,000 workers as of the end of March 2023, according to a recent annual report.

More than 8,000 employees added in most recently completed fiscal year

A highrise tower complex seen from across a snowy river.
Part of the Place du Portage federal government complex in Gatineau, Que., a major hub for federal workers in the National Capital Region. (Christian Patry/Radio-Canada)

The National Capital Region's federal public service ranks grew by 8,360 people over the most recent fiscal year to sit at130,611 workers as of the end of March 2023, according to an annual report.

The federal government is the top employerin the capital region, which has a population of about 1.5 million between Ottawa-Gatineau and other nearby communities such asAlmonte, Chelsea, Pakenham and Val-des-Monts.

They're 47.6 per cent of the country's 274,219 workerscovered by thePublic Service Employment Act, including students andcasualstaff. That share of Ottawa-area workers has edged up four of the last five years.

Overall, the national civil servantworkforce grew by more than 16,600 people in the 2022-23fiscal year, according to thePublic Service Commission of Canada's report.

If you just look at hires, 71,200 people were brought in from outside the public service in 2022-23, up about 10 per cent or 6,400 hires from the year prior.

The report notes Indigenous people and people with disabilities were underrepresented in its applicant pool. This was before changes in July 2023 that try to create "a more inclusive and diverse public service" by removing barriers in the hiring process.

A few days before the end of the 2022-23 fiscal year, the federal budget included cutting $15.4 billion in spending over five years through "targeted reductions."

Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre has long been telling voters he'll run a smaller, more limited government.

With files from Radio-Canada