Ottawa

Supreme Court won't allow expanded Phoenix pay system lawsuit

The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear a bid to have more federal civil servants included in a class-action lawsuit against the government over the faulty Phoenix pay system, effectively excluding workers who have access to a federal grievance process.

Workers with access to federal grievance process will remain excluded

The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa is set to hear a case that could result in thousands of charges being thrown out across the country. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear a bid to have more federal civil servants included in a class-action lawsuit against the government over the faulty Phoenix pay system.

The system, implemented for the federal public service in February 2016, has experienced countless failures since its launch.

Many federal government employees have not been paid for long periods of time, have been paid less than expected or have been overpaid since the Phoenix system was set up.

In April 2018, a Quebec Superior Court judge authorized a class-action lawsuit seeking to compensate victims of the Phoenix fiasco, but the terms excluded workers who have access to the federal grievance process.

More than 60 people protested the Phoenix pay system in front of the federal pay centre in Miramichi, N.B. in February. (Shane Magee/CBC)

The province's Court of Appeal rejected a request by a Quebec City law firm to broaden the class action, prompting the firm to take the case to the Supreme Court.

As is typical, the high court gave no reasons for refusing to hear the appeal.

The law firm handling the suit told CBC last year there could be between 40,000 and 70,000 claimants even if it couldn't be expanded.