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PanaEng said:We are not employed by the CF or DND.
We are employed by Treasury Board.
Strictly speaking, CF are employed by the crown; Treasury Board sets the terms and conditions; those t&c are then administered by the CF.
Retired CF members have been able to go to work for the PS, DND, RCMP, etc. while collecting their pension. Wouldn't you want to retain that talent?
It is common here in the RCMP; Cpl, Sgt or Insp retires and they come back to work as a TCE (Temp Civ Empl) after a suitable break - collecting their well earned pension and we use their vast experience at a cheaper cost than to fill that position with a Cpl, Sgt, insp or CM.
So, a retired RCMP member is brought back as a civilian. No issue. If, on the other hand, they were brought back as a member of the Force, paid a salary and permitted to be simultaneously drawing their pension we'd be in the same situation that the CF is in with former Reg F members receiving an annuity while working on an ongoing full-time basis - in many cases, for years at a stretch.
As for the argument that a civilian company wouldn't pay a pension to an employee if they hired them again, it happens all the time: employee retires; company can't find enough qualified pers to fill the spot/function or the work is not enough to fill a full time spot: employee hired as a consultant, keeps collecting pension.
Y2K problem was a good example of that but there are many more and ongoing situations.
cheers,
Frank
Again, consultants and public service employment are different. and not part of this discussion.
I once read Quebec's "Sovereignty Association" as being "divorce with bed privileges". That seems to be the desire of some - they want to leave the Reg F but still be a CF member full-time, all while drawing a pension for being a former CF member.
Tightening the rules to say "If you're doing it for more than a year, you get one year for free, but then you're back in" is not onerous or punitive.