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Federal government agrees to binding arbitration in foreign service job dispute

The Public Service Labour Relations Board says the federal government has been bargaining in bad faith with its striking diplomats. Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press

OTTAWA – The federal government says it is willing to settle its dispute with Canada’s striking foreign-service workers through binding arbitration – subject to certain conditions.

Treasury Board President Tony Clement says the conditions are confidential and cannot be shared publicly.

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The union representing the workers asked Clement last Thursday for binding arbitration, giving him a deadline of noon Tuesday.

The Professional Association of Foreign Service Officers’ 1,350 members have been in a legal strike position since April, and have been staging rotating job actions in Ottawa and at foreign missions.

The union wants wage parity with counterparts in other federal departments who make as much as $14,000 more for doing similar work.

Clement says the jobs of foreign-service officers are substantively different from public-service lawyers, economists or commerce officers.

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