The Professional Institute Legacy Foundation is a visible demonstration of our commitment to the next generation of professionals. The Foundation's sole purpose is to support the education of deserving children across Canada.
Union-management consultation is a forum where issues can be discussed in an effort to develop and maintain sound and harmonious union/management relations.
The engineering questionnaire was made available to the majority of the PIPSC membership exclusively online for three weeks in February with a closing date of February 27, 2013.
On behalf of the Engineering Working Group of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, we invite you to celebrate our exciting and diverse profession by getting involved in the events of National Engineering Month.
In order for the Advisory Council’s Engineering Working Group to make certain recommendations and decisions, you are invited to complete the following questionnaire.
On behalf of Engineering Working Group of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, we invite you to celebrate our exciting and diverse profession by getting involved in the events of National Engineering Month.
Engineers Canada and the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) believe that by increasing the number of licensed engineers in the federal public service, Canadians will benefit from a higher level of health, safety, security and quality of life.
Four federal government engineers from the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) met with PEO and Engineers Canada on November 29 to discuss licensure strategies for engineers within the federal government.
The engineering profession can finally claim victory after the federal government quietly withdrew its appeal of a Federal Court ruling upholding an arbitration award requiring the federal Treasury Board to pay the annual licence fees of federally employed engineers doing engineering work.
In a triumph of common sense over bluster, the federal government has finally and belatedly recognized that Canada’s nuclear facilities must be regulated by thoroughly qualified staff.
The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada denounces the federal government's decision to appeal a Federal Court ruling, another demonstration of how poorly the public service is being managed.
The federal government has requested a judicial review of a July 2009 arbitration ruling that would require the Treasury Board to pay the annual licence fees of its engineer employees doing engineering work.