Liberals 'throwing good money after bad' on Phoenix, union says - Action News
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Ottawa

Liberals 'throwing good money after bad' on Phoenix, union says

The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada says the Liberals are wasting taxpayers' money by throwing hundredsof millions of dollars atthe failed Phoenix pay system instead of finding a replacement for it.

Federal budget devotes more than $500M toward troubled pay system

Debi Daviau is the national president of PIPSC. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

A union representing federal government workersis accusing the Liberals of"throwing good money after bad" by tossing hundredsof millions of dollars atthe failed Phoenix pay system.

The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) said it would have liked to see the 2019 budget, unveiled Tuesday, instead devote more money to finding a replacement.

"We know Phoenix can't be fixed, so there seems to be a perfect willingness to keep throwing good money after bad on the old system," PIPSC'snational president,Debi Daviau, told CBC Radio'sAll In A Day.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed Joyce Murray as Canada's President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Digital Government. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

The budget earmarks $553 million between now and April 2022 $374 million by April 2020 to fix the payroll system, which has improperly paid tens of thousands of public servants since its launch in February2016.

The new moneywill bring the total amount dedicated to fixing Phoenix to $1.5 billion.

"We would reallyhave liked to have seen a much more focused commitmenton the purchase of a new system that can actually pay people accurately," Daviau said.

But newly appointed Treasury Board President Joyce Murraysaid the investment is needed to resolve the tens of thousands of outstanding claims from public servants, some of whom have found themselves in serious financial trouble due to the mess.

"Minister [of Public Services and Procurement and AccessibilityCarla] Qualtroughhas that as her top priority, to stabilize the existing system and eliminate the backlog of claims,"Murray told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning.

The government isn't rushing toput a final dollar figure on a replacement just yet, Murray said.

"We're making progress on [a new system]. We're not going to put a budget in and try and fit this program into the budget," she said. "We will fit the budget to the job, not the job to the budget."

'Piece by piece'

The Treasury Board is hoping to bring forward possible replacement options this spring.

The department is preparing to move ahead with a pilot stage that will see three bidders bring forward proposed solutions and get feedback from civil servants, Murray said.

Conservative finance criticPierre Poilievresaid he doesn't want to see the government rush into another mess.

"We should do it in small steps. That way if there's a problem, you can hit the pause button and fix that problem before you mess up the financial lives of hundreds of thousands of people," Poilievre told Ottawa Morning.

Murray said that's precisely the approach her government is taking.

"We're doing it piece by piece," shesaid.