Canadian
Federal Public Servants appear indifferent to a variety of
Indigenous cultural awareness and sensitivity programs offered through the Canada
School of Public Service (CSPS), with the highest Department attendance
being just 16 per cent.
The CSPS offers 15 different training sessions
on Indigenous issues, known as the Indigenous Training Series, but less than a
fifth of Public Servants have attended any one session, according to the
numbers from the CSPS.
The most-attended session, called Reflecting on Cultural Bias: Indigenous
Perspectives, has seen 51,430 Public Servants participate as of June this
year.
Other sessions, including Taking Steps Towards Indigenous Reconciliation, saw participation
rates lower than one per cent.
While employees in Indigenous Services Canada and
Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada are required to complete
15 hours of culturally-competent learning each year, there is no Government-wide
directive for mandatory training on Indigenous topics.
A former Federal
employee and a plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit alleging systemic
discrimination in the Federal Public Service, Letitia Wells said the low
participation rates were disappointing, but not surprising.
"Confronting racism when you are part of an
organisation that has that very racism embedded as part of its culture is
painful," Ms Wells said.
A statement from President of the Treasury Board,
Mona Fortier said the CSPS provided a number of training resources on
Indigenous topics, but Departments were responsible for determining what was
made mandatory.
Meanwhile,
a recent survey has found Federal workers are
increasingly cynical, sceptical and disillusioned about the idea of reporting
wrongdoing in the Public Service.
Research firm Phoenix Strategic
Perspectives Inc. found that pessimism was more “palpable and widespread” now
than it was before the pandemic, and bureaucrats have become more likely to
fear reprisals for whistle-blowing.
The report was delivered to the
Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner, which investigates serious
abuses within the Federal Government.
The Commissioner, Joe Friday,
said there was a maze of oversight mechanisms available to Public Servants and
it could be discouraging or exhausting to figure out where to lodge a
complaint.
“Public Servants are feeling
more isolated and disconnected during the pandemic, making it more difficult to
feel confident in coming forward, let alone to gather the sort of documentation
that whistle-blowers need,” Mr Friday (pictured) said.
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