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Scientists who supervise Canadaâs environmental wellness and protect Canadians from uttermost(a) endure events and industrial disasters could presently find themselves on the federal governmentâs chopping block.
Prime Minister Mark Carneyâs Liberal government is in the process of reducing the size of its public service. Thousands of jobs are on the line, including 840 positions at Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC).
As public servants wait to learn their fate, scientists and labour leaders are warning these cuts could significantly impact the health and safety of Canadians as well as Canada's wildlife and environment.
âIt is the kind of research that I believe that Canadians need and want at this time,â retired ECCC scientist Christine Bishop told Laura Lynch, host of What On Earth. âThey have to look for other ways to trim the fat in the government.â
Carney's first budget, delivered in November, announced plans to shrink the federal bureaucracy by 16,000 full-time equivalent positions â which is not necessarily the same as 16,000 individuals â over three years.
ECCC will reduce its workforce by roughly 10 per cent, or the equivalent of 840 full-time roles, department spokesperson Samantha Bayard wrote in an email.
Despite the cuts, she wrote the department remains âcommitted to its mandate and advancing Canadaâs leadership in environmental protection, nature stewardship, science and weather services, clean technology, and building a greener, more sustainable future.
Sean O'Reilly, president of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC), isnât convinced the department can cut hundreds of jobs and stay true to its mandate.
PIPSC represents thousands of public servants who are bracing for job cuts, including those at ECCC.
While heâs worried about his unionâs members, OâReilly says heâs also concerned about the safety and well-being of Canadians.Â
âThese aren't just numbers on a spreadsheet. This is real science being cut,â he said. "You can't cut public science or staff without increasing public risk.â
On Jan. 27, an email went out to ECCCâs Science and Technology Branch (STB) staff from assistant deputy minister Marc DâIorio, warning that 120 full-time roles would be cut over the next year, starting in April.
âThe focus will be on efficiency, integration, and impact, rather than eliminating critical functions. Some reductions were targeted in areas where extensive expertise exists outside the Department or the public service.â
While PIPSC doesnât yet know which areas of research will be affected, OâReilly says the people at ECCC do essential work.
âThey work with avalanches, hurricanes, and severe weather events. What's going to happen to those alerts in Canada if those folks aren't there to do that work?â he said.Â
â[They are] the ones that prevent oil spills from becoming catastrophes, you know, who are ensuring dangerous goods don't explode on our railways.â
Throughout Canadaâs history, he says, a failure to adequately invest in the public service had real, and sometimes deadly, consequences.
He pointed to the 2013 fatal rail disaster in Lac Megantic, Que., which researchers from Torontoâs York University blamed on â a decades-long process of deregulation and reduced resources â at Transport Canada, or Canadaâs struggle to respond quickly to the COVID-19 pandemic, which some doctors blamed on chronic underresourcing at Canadaâs Public Health Agency.
âThese cuts today potentially could mean a crisis tomorrow,â he said.
ECCC did not respond to questions about whether the cuts would impact weather forecasting and alert systems.Â
Public servants speak out over job cuts as thousands more put on notice
Bishop, who spent decades working as a federal ecotoxicologist before retiring three years ago, says the team was already a âskeleton crew, and any staff reductions will likely have devastating effects on essential research.Â
She and her colleagues worked alongside Indigenous communities to monitor the impacts of environmental contaminants on wildlife and the environment â things like pesticides, microplastics, forever chemicals or diluted bitumen from the oilsands.
Itâs the kind of work that she believes matters to everyday Canadians.
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