Ottawa Considering ‘Combination of Approaches’ to 20% Military Pay Hike
- On June 21, 2025, Ottawa announced a planned near 20 percent pay increase for Canadian Armed Forces members amid ongoing recruitment and retention challenges.
- This announcement follows years of personnel shortages, housing issues, training delays, and past unfulfilled promises that have frustrated military personnel.
- Defence Minister David McGuinty's office is considering a combination of approaches including retention bonuses for stress trades and broad salary increases.
- Charlotte Duval-Lantoine noted that military pay scales are complex and predicted the increase will not be an across-the-board hike, while former ombudsman Gary Walbourne called the promise vague.
- The pay raise aims to improve attraction and retention, but effective implementation remains uncertain given infrastructure problems and complicated pay mechanisms.
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Ottawa Considering ‘Combination of Approaches’ to 20% Military Pay Hike
Defence Minister David McGuinty’s office says it’s considering a “combination of approaches” to boosting pay for armed service members, including introducing retention bonuses for “stress trades.” “This investment represents an almost 20 percent increase to the overall CAF compensation envelope,” McGuinty’s spokesperson Laurent de Casanove said in an email statement to The Canadian Press. “The Department of National Defence and the Canadian Arme…
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