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Montreal

Quebec nurses camp out in front of National Assembly to pressure government into deal

In an attempt to pressure the Legault government into moving negotiations forward, Quebec's largest nurses' union has been camping out in front of the National Assembly since Tuesday.

Union has been without a collective agreement for more than 500 days

People protesting outdoors.
Members of the Fdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec have threatened to stop working overtime as of next week. (Colin Ct-Paulette/Radio-Canada)

A group of nurses iscamping out, day andnight, in front of the National Assembly in an attempt to pressure the Legault government into striking a deal with its union, which has been without a collective agreement for well over500 days.

The union began camping out in front of the provincial legislature on Tuesday and plans to stay thereuntil Thursday.

Protesting throughout the day, evening and night is meant to be a symbol of the round-the-clock nature of the union members' work.

The protest coincides with the beginning of the National Assembly's fall session.

TheFdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec(FIQ) has a membership of about 80,000 and represents nurses, practical nurses,respiratory therapists and clinical perfusionists. Last fall, itwas among several unions representing hundreds of thousands of public sector workers involved in a large-scale labour dispute with the province that eventually shut down schools and delayed surgeries.

The FIQ is the only major union left without a collective agreement. It expired in March 2023.

"It's true, 500 days is a long time but we're hoping to come to an agreement," said Isabelle Trpanier, the FIQ's secretary general.

In April of this year, the Quebec government and the union had an agreement in principle, butmembers rejected it.

Issues around staff retention and mobility are among the major sticking points in negotiations.

Negotiations are stuck around the government's demand that nurses, on a voluntary basis, be free to move from one health-care facility to another to address needs in the system where they arise.

But the FIQdisagrees with the proposal, saying itdisregards nurses' expertise and treats them like interchangeable pawns.

Late last month, the union threatened to stop working overtime hours as of Sept. 19.

With files from Radio-Canada's David Rmillard