Ottawa

Hundreds of thousands of Phoenix cases still outstanding

As hundreds of thousands of Phoenix-related cases sit waiting to be resolved, the federal government is struggling to clear the backlog as new cases keep flooding in.

Pay centre reduced cases by 18,000 cases last month but backlog still sits at 228,000

The federal government saw a net reduction of 18,000 in the number of outstanding cases related to its problem-plagued Phoenix pay system between late June and late July, new numbers show. (CBC)

As hundreds of thousands of Phoenix-related cases sit waiting to be resolved, the federal government is struggling to clear the backlog as new cases keep flooding in.

According to numbers released Thursday by Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC), its pay centre in Miramichi, N.B., processed 89,000 between June 29 and July 26.

The pay centre, however, also received 71,000 new cases during that period — so the net reduction of cases related to the civil servant pay system was only about 18,000.

That means that as of July 26, there were still roughly 228,000 outstanding Phoenix cases requiring resolution, PSPC said in its update.

At the beginning of June, there were 265,000 cases needing help.

Since the federal government launched the consolidated pay system in February 2016, tens of thousands of public servants have found errors on their paycheques.

Federal workers, retirees, students and employees on leave have reported being overpaid, underpaid or not paid at all.

PSPC is promising to issue monthly updates on how quickly the pay centre is processing the backlog of outstanding Phoenix cases. Their numbers have been rounded for the sake of clarity, the department said.

The government has estimated it will cost more than $400 million to fix the troubled pay system.