These terms and conditions take effect on January 1, 2006 and supersede the version dated January 1, 2005.
Unless provided herein, the definitions shall be those used in the Public Service Terms and Conditions of Employment
Regulations for non-executive group employees.
A deputy head may authorize any person employed in his or her department to exercise any of the powers, functions or duties of
the deputy head under these terms and conditions.
Students are defined as employees under the Financial Administration Act and the Government Employees Compensation
Act. However, they are not subject to the Public Service Staff Relations Act, and an exclusion order under the Public
Service Employment Act precludes their eligibility for closed competitions while they are working as students.
This section applies to all students participating in a non-paid assignment program, such as the Secondary School Co-op
Education Program.
Non-paid assignments are usually arranged on a half-day basis. This does not preclude other scheduling arrangements that the
student, school and manager might negotiate. Assignments with working days longer than the standard 7.5-hour working day are not
appropriate.
The delegated manager may pay the student a travel allowance of up to the value of a "round-trip" daily or monthly
public transit fare, whichever is less, between the student's school, work site and home, or the reverse.
Managers must ensure that an authorized work-education agreement precedes any student assignment. Under this agreement, the
relevant school administration must provide workers' compensation for the student, in case the student is disabled by a workplace
injury.
This section applies to all persons engaged under one of the employment programs described in Student Employment Programs
in the Federal Government.
The delegated manager shall set the student's hours of work consistent with the relevant collective agreement and departmental
practice.
- The relevant collective agreement shall be the collective agreement of the predominant group whose duties the student is
understudying or performing in part during the assignment period.
- All letters of offer shall clearly state the relevant collective agreement.
- Subject to these regulations and any other enactment of the Treasury Board, a student assigned under one of the student
employment programs is entitled to be paid a biweekly salary for the services rendered, at the appropriate pay rate (see
Appendix A - General pay rates and Appendix B - Pay rates for departmental programs).
- All rates also apply to formal apprenticeship programs.
- A student shall be compensated for overtime according to the relevant collective agreement, provided
- the delegated manager required the student to work overtime;
- the student did not control the duration of the overtime period; and
- the delegated manager certifies the duration of the overtime worked, and authorizes the compensation.
- Notwithstanding the payment options under the relevant collective agreement, a student may not be compensated for overtime
in the form of compensatory leave.
Students are not entitled to acting pay.
Students are entitled to the following benefits, to be administered in accordance with the provisions of the relevant
collective agreement:
- call-back pay;
- standby pay;
- reporting pay;
- shift and weekend premium;
- pennological factor allowance;
- travelling time; and
- overtime meal allowance.
Students are not entitled to the bilingualism bonus.
With the exception of bereavement leave, a student is not entitled to leave with pay.
In lieu of vacation, students are entitled to vacation pay, equal to four per cent of their total regular and overtime
earnings.
- A student on full-time assignment is entitled to pay for a designated holiday, provided he or she is not on leave without
pay on the working day preceding and the working day following that holiday.
- A student on part-time assignment shall not be paid for the designated holidays but shall, instead be paid based on the
principles found in the relevant collective agreement.
- For students engaged in foreign assignments, delegated managers may substitute the equivalent number of local designated
holidays falling within the specified work terms.
- Every student shall be granted bereavement leave for a period of up to three consecutive calendar days, to include the day
of the funeral, when a member of the immediate family dies. Such leave is to be without pay for the first three months of
continuous employment, and with pay thereafter.
- Immediate family is defined as father, mother (or alternatively stepparents, foster parents), brother, sister, spouse (or
common-law spouse residing with the student), dependent child, stepchild, ward, father-in-law, mother-in-law and relative
permanently residing in the student's household or with whom the student permanently resides.
Students are not entitled to paid sick leave and do not accrue sick leave credits.
The delegated manager may grant leave without pay for any purpose, but not beyond the specified period of the student's
assignment.
- A student with at least three months of continuous employment who is laid off before the end of his or her assignment
without being given two weeks' notice shall receive compensation in lieu of notice. In cases of termination of employment for
disciplinary reasons, refer to section 3.19 Discipline.
- The compensation will equal two weeks' pay or pay to the end of the specified period of the assignment, whichever is less.
- If the student is re-assigned to the Public Service before the end of the period for which compensation had been paid, he or
she shall repay that part of the compensation representing the time from the date of re-assignment to the end of the original
compensable period.
Where required, students must have appropriate security clearances.
- The following provisions apply to all Canadian students engaged under one of the student employment programs.
- Students must not be paid a salary while travelling, except when in travel status once engaged.
- The manager may decide the mode of transportation to be used by students travelling to and from their educational centres.
Travel must be arranged by the most economical and practical means. The Government Travel Service (GTS) shall be used, where
practical, to make travel reservations immediately, once the student accepts employment, in order to obtain the lowest fare,
with open return tickets when economical and practical. Departments shall maintain a separate Departmental Travel Account and
Travel Authority Number (TAN) Register for student travel of this nature.
- Travel by private motor vehicle may be authorized. In such cases, the applicable kilometric rate is the employee-requested
rate (Appendix B of the Travel Directive), plus the necessary costs incurred en route for tolls for roads, ferries,
bridges and tunnels.
- Students required to travel on official government business travel during the work period are eligible for the employee
defined reimbursement, as published in the Travel Directive.
- During the work period, students who are assigned to field parties may, at the discretion of the manager, be given board and
lodging while employed in the field. This would normally be done in the same circumstances in which board and lodging would be
provided to indeterminate employees.
- Actual and reasonable transportation expenses may be paid, up to a maximum of the most economical air fare available for
travel by employees which provides a standard of travel comparable to that provided by major airlines for the most direct
routing at the time of travel, for
- travel from a Canadian educational centre to the reporting place or workplace and, return travel on completion of the
assignment
- to the original educational centre, or
- to another educational centre where the student will continue his or her education, provided that this does not increase
the transportation costs; and
- travel from an educational centre located outside Canada to the reporting place or workplace and, on completion of the
assignment, return travel as described in (i) above.
- In addition to transportation expenses provided under paragraph (b), a student may be reimbursed up to a maximum of
$200 per return trip, for the combined miscellaneous expenses incurred at the start or at the end of a given period of
continuous employment. This provision is intended to offset such additional costs as the return shipment of personal effects
and temporary accommodation on arrival. Receipts are to be provided, when available. The honour system applies, at the
discretion of the employer, when receipts are not available.
- For assignments outside Canada, the delegated manager may:
- reimburse the student any proportion of actual transportation expenses between the student's home (or educational centre)
and the reporting place or workplace, up to the Apex air fare published by the Department of Foreign Affairs and
International Trade for travel by employees which provides a standard of travel comparable to that provided by major
international airlines for the most direct routing at the time of travel.
- reimburse the student up to a maximum of $250 per return trip, to help offset miscellaneous costs incurred in transit to
the reporting place or workplace or on arrival at home (or educational centre).
- authorize payment of a daily post allowance of up to 65 per cent of the meal rate for dinner, as established under
the Travel Directive for the workplace. A lesser allowance may be given, depending on living cost at the workplace,
student availability and program budget.
- While the variable rates for assignments outside Canada give managers operational flexibility to respond to changing
economic conditions, they are to be applied consistently to all students engaged at the same workplace.
Students assigned to work in an isolated post, as defined in the Isolated Post Directive, are eligible for the
relevant environment allowance, the living cost differential, and the fuels and utilities differential, based on the
classification of the post.
Subject to any other enactment of the Treasury Board, the deputy head may:
- establish standards of discipline for students on assignment; and
- prescribe, impose, vary or rescind, in whole or in part, the financial and other penalties, including suspension and
termination of assignment, that may be applied for breaches of discipline or misconduct.
Compensation for students working in part-time assignments shall be based on the principles found in the students' relevant
collective agreements.
If a student employed under a student employment program is subsequently appointed to the Public Service, assignments may be
counted as continuous employment, provided they meet the relevant criteria of the applicable terms and conditions of employment.
Secondary school students
Areas
|
Effective January 1, 2006 |
Yukon, Nunavut and NWT
|
$9.85 |
Atlantic Provinces
|
$8.95 |
Quebec
|
$8.95 |
Toronto Metropolitan Area
|
$9.40 |
Ontario, excluding Toronto Metro
|
$8.95 |
Manitoba
|
$9.04 |
Saskatchewan
|
$9.04 |
Alberta
|
$9.04 |
Vancouver and Victoria Metropolitan Areas
|
$9.85 |
British Columbia, excluding Vancouver and Metro
|
$9.63 |
Notes:
- For assignments requiring secondary
school education, managers may offer the assignment to post‑secondary
students and pay them the secondary school rate of pay only when secondary
school students are not available.
- The applicable rate is based on the
assignment's location. Example: A student living in Toronto accepts an
assignment in Ontario outside Metro Toronto. The applicable rate is the one for
Ontario, not the one for Metro Toronto.
|
Minimum
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maximum
|
College
|
10.72
|
11.36
|
12.04
|
12.77
|
13.55
|
14.36
|
|
|
Undergraduate
|
11.16
|
11.96
|
12.79
|
13.68
|
14.62
|
15.68
|
16.75
|
17.94
|
Postgraduate
|
15.68
|
16.91
|
18.27
|
19.73
|
|
|
|
|
Doctoral
|
18.11
|
19.74
|
21.51
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
- Rates of pay are determined at the
initial appointment or reappointment stage and are based on the current
academic level.
- Generally, the rate of pay selected
should allow for a meaningful progression in the salary range on subsequent
assignments. At the discretion of the manager, pay at any step above the
minimum may be paid:
to students who are re‑employed
as defined by the PSC for the purpose of referral of students;
or
to students who possess some relevant
previous work experience;
or
where there is a shortage of students
in the field of study required;
or
when a university degree or year of
study is required as a pre‑requisite for another program – such as a
bachelor of law, education, medicine, pharmacy or veterinary sciences program;
or
- to students who have completed more
than 1 year of study in their present academic program.
- A pre‑university year taken at a
university is to be remunerated at the college/Cegep level.
- A student who:
- has completed a university degree, and
- continues his/her studies at a college
in a related field of study,
shall be paid at
the step in the salary range for university undergraduate studies which is not
less than the salary earned in the previous year.
Research affiliates
Effective
September 1, 1996, deputy heads are authorized to set a stipend in lieu of a
salary. The stipend should reflect the student research fee structure in place
in the student's academic institution. If such a structure does not exist, the
department should make a comparison with a similar school that does have such a
stipend. Barring this, the stipend cannot exceed the corresponding hourly,
weekly or monthly rate established for other post‑secondary students for
their completed years in their current field of study.
Student Rates of Pay for Departmental Programs
(effective January 1, 2006)
Assignment
|
Pay Rate ($)
|
Crew
|
University Undergraduate Step 3 (12.79)
|
Coxswain
|
University Undergraduate Step 7 (16.75)
|
Assignment
|
Pay Rate ($)
|
Summer Employment Officers
|
University Undergraduate Step 2 (11.96)
|
Senior Summer Employment Officers
|
University Undergraduate Step 4 (13.68)
|
Vimy Guide Program (Veterans Affairs Canada)
Assignment
|
Pay Rate ($)
|
Guides
|
University Undergraduate Step 2 (11.96)
|
Guides (Call-back)
|
University Undergraduate Step 3 (12.79)
|
Senior Guides
|
University Undergraduate Step 4 (13.68)
|
|