Here are the B.C. ministries, provincial agencies and roles affected by job action – Brandon Sun

About 26,000 members of two unions representing British Columbia professionals and public service workers are involved in an intensifying job battle as they push for higher wages in new contracts with the provincial government.

More than 1,000 members of the Professional Employees Association and about 25,000 members of the British Columbia Employees Union are participating in the week-long strike.

More than 20 provincial ministries, corporations and Crown agencies are affected. Here's the breakdown:

BCGEU Employment Campaign

Ministries

Citizen Services (including BC Service)

Education and child care

Energy and climate solutions

Finance

Housing and municipal affairs

Indigenous relations and reconciliation

Infrastructure

Jobs and economic growth

Mining and Critical Minerals

Office of the Prime Minister

Tourism, art, culture and sports

Water, land and resource management

Post-Secondary Education and Future Skills

BC Crown Corporations and Agencies

British Columbia Pension Corporation

Commercial Vehicle Safety and Law Enforcement

Employment Standards Division

Forest Practices Council

Liquor distribution branch including all BC Liquor and BC Cannabis stores.

Royal British Columbia Museum

Promotion of the Association of Professional Employees

The union representing professionals says all its members, except essential workers, are on strike in the following ministries:

Attorney General

Health

Mining and Critical Minerals

Transport and transit

Water, land and resource management

The union says some, but not all, of its members are on strike in these ministries:

Agriculture and food

Energy and climate solutions

Environment and parks

Forests

Professional titles and employees involved in official activities include:

Agrologists

Engineers – environmental specialist, geohazard and slope stability geologist, road safety engineer.

Foresters

Geologist – dam safety specialist, groundwater hydrologist.

Lawyers – legal consultants, litigation

Mines – reclamation specialist, occupational health, safety and permitting inspectors.

The union says examples of essential workers who would never strike include hydrologists at the BC River Forecast Center and child and youth psychologists at the Ministry of Child and Family Development.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 10, 2025.

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