Last Friday I was in Miramichi. We announced the opening of a state-of-the-art pay centre and the rollout of the pod pilot project. I spent quite some time with some really important focus groups with some very candid and thoughtful employees. They shared with me both the struggles they've had over the past two years going through all this change and the feeling of bearing the weight of the world on their shoulders that they can't pay their colleagues in Victoria, that they haven't been able to resolve this or slay this dragon. It was demoralizing.
I felt a very different tone from the focus group I did with the employees in the pod project, who have seen success and feel like they have a plan. Their respectful request to me was that we don't get in their way. They think this is the way to deal with this and to support them and to build the capacity around them, and to focus ministerial priorities on getting these pods implemented and rolled out within capacity limits as soon as possible.
I think there's still a frustration amongst employees, not at all to the same extent in terms of their not maybe having the tools, like they felt in the past, or not being very clear on how they could solve this, but that it's not being resolved as quickly as they would like. They want to help their fellow public servants. They're hired with this big idea that they're going to come in and we're going to slay this dragon and it takes time.
I talked to a union representative who said that he's noticed an absolute change in the demeanor and morale. I heard about a woman who historically has spent some time every spring on stress leave, and this was the first time in three years she hasn't taken that stress leave because she feels like she's supported. So the morale has definitely improved. I would say significantly, but you may have noticed I have a penchant for optimism.
I left there hopeful that employees feel like they're well supported, that the government has their back, that their fellow public servants understand how hard they're working, that they're no longer being blamed for this. Before, headlines would say Miramichi this and Miramichi that. That's not the case anymore. Everybody understands how hard they're working.
I told them and I'll tell you. I'm unapologetic about making sure everybody knows that.