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In 2004, a provision (Appendix H) was added to the GLP collective agreement to allow for compensation of our members when they step up to help in emergencies. Unfortunately, there are some issues with this provision:
Not only is the current situation unfair – it hurts BC’s emergency response by discouraging participation by our members. It’s especially challenging for parents. Working long hours, working evenings and weekends, or even being asked to work from another location means time away from kids and childcare arrangements that are sometimes costly – all while being paid the same as they were for their standard work week. For our women members especially, this is a barrier.
The PEA has advocated for changes to the current situation for a number of years, but we haven’t been able to make progress on updating Appendix H. That’s why we’re campaigning the BC Government to find a solution that’s fairer to our GLP members, and will make it possible for more of these talented, dedicated experts to step up and help communities in BC recover when emergencies happen.
Wildfire season: GLP members deployed
Since 2004 PEA members have been answering the call to help out with disaster response efforts during provincial emergencies. This despite being compensated less than their BCGEU colleagues doing the same work. The Professional reports on the inequality—and what’s being done about it in a two-part series looking at Appendix H and emergency response. This is part one on wildfires.
The 2021 B.C. fire season saw 1,600 fires burning across 8,700 square kilometres of our beautiful province. It was the third worse wildfire season on record, for area impacted. The town of Lytton burned to the ground. Cattle, pets, and wildlife vanished in the flames. People lost their homes, their possessions, their livelihoods…
Wildfire season: GLP members deployed
The weekend before BC’s catastrophic floods in November, PEA members across the province were on high alert as they followed news reports about weather and rainfall projections. Modelling predicted nearly a month’s worth of rain would pummel southern Vancouver Island, the South Coast, parts of the Interior and the Kootenay Region, in just a few days.
In Penticton, Mike Noseworthy sounded the alarm with colleagues at the regional district, signaling that flooding was likely imminent. A senior dam safety engineer and flood specialist with the Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development (FLNRO), Noseworthy worked through the weekend to identify areas to be put on evacuation alert and prepared to assess the damage by helicopter first thing Monday morning…