The BC Housing Management Commission and the BCGEU Administrative/Clerical division and the BCGEU Service/Maintenance division have ratified their agreements reached under the 2014 Economic Stability Mandate.
The five-year agreements cover approximately 360 employees who provide a variety of services in the administration of subsidized housing and the Homeowner Protection Branch, and almost 150 employees who provide building management and maintenance services for BC Housing.
The term of the new agreements is from April 1, 2014, to March 31, 2019. The agreements provide for a modest 5.5% wage increase over the five years of the term with potential for additional increases if the B.C. economy exceeds the annual forecasts set by the Economic Forecast Council during the last four years of the agreement.
Approximately 200,000 public-sector employees are now covered by tentative or ratified agreements under the Economic Stability Mandate. Overall, this represents about two-thirds of all unionized public-sector employees in B.C.
The government’s Economic Stability Mandate provides public-sector employers the ability to negotiate longer-term agreements within a fixed fiscal envelope, and offers employees an opportunity to participate in the province’s economic growth through the Economic Stability Dividend. Settlements are expected to be unique and to reflect priorities negotiated to ensure labour stability and affordable service delivery throughout B.C.
Quick Facts:
- The new 2014 Economic Stability Mandate applies to all public-sector employers whose collective agreements expired on or after Dec. 31, 2013.
- If the province’s real GDP growth exceeds forecasts over the terms of the agreement, the agreement provides for the sharing of some benefits of that growth with the public-sector employees who work on behalf of British Columbians and help make that growth possible.
- Under this proposal, employees would receive a conditional, incremental wage increase equal to half of any percentage-point gain in real GDP growth above the Economic Forecast Council’s forecast published in the February budget.
- For example, if real GDP growth is one percentage point above forecast real GDP growth, then a 0.5% wage increase would result, beyond whatever wage increase had been negotiated in the contract.
- An up-to-date listing of tentative and ratified agreements under the Economic Stability Mandate is available at: http://www.fin.gov.bc.ca/psec/
Media Contacts:
Government Communications and Public Engagement
Jamie Edwardson
Ministry of Finance
250 356-2821
Government Communications and Public Engagement
Sandra Steilo
Ministry of Natural Gas Development and Responsible for Housing
250 952-0617