Quebec plans to make private nursing agencies less attractive to keep workers in public sector - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec plans to make private nursing agencies less attractive to keep workers in public sector

According to Radio-Canada,the Quebec government plans to force private agenciesto mainly fill evening, overnight and weekend shifts in hopes of retaining nurses in the public sector a move that's left some in the health-care system divided.

New measures will include forcing private agencies to fill less desirable hours

The Quebec government is expected to force private agencies to fill less favourable shifts, such asevening, overnight and weekend shifts in an attempt to keep nurses in the public sector from switching over. (CBC / Radio-Canada)

In its latest effort to retain nurses in the public sector, Quebec is expected to impose new measures that would make working inprivate nursing agencies less attractive.

Nurses have said the poor working conditions in the province's public health-care system havepushed them into the private sector, which offers better pay and more flexible hours.

This week, according to Radio-Canada,the government plans to force private agencies to fill less favourable shifts, such asevening, overnight and weekend shifts.

Schedule changeswerepart of the list of incentives the Quebec governmentannounced on Sept. 23, when it said it would set aside $1 billion and offer nurses bonuses of up to $18,000 to make the public sector more attractive.

It is, however, a move that's left some in the health-care system divided.

"It doesn't make sense that I have better working conditions than somebody employed by the public sector, but the solution for that isn't to take away those conditions which are actually keeping a lot of nurses in the profession," saidAlex Magdzinski, a nurse in the province's private sector and vice-president of the Quebec Nurses' Association.

Alex Magdzinski left Quebec's public sector to work at a private nursing agency in Nunavik due to better pay and flexible hours. (Submitted by Alex Magdzinski)

Magdzinski used to work in the public sector, but he left in November 2020 to work for a private nursing agency in Nunavik, in northern Quebec,due to the flexibility it offered.

He says instead of trying to make the private system less desirable, the government should be trying to make the public system better.

"Really looking at what can be done with scheduling and flexibility in the public sector is more what the government should be doing rather than trying to eliminateagencies from having that flexibility for their employees," he said.

He added conditions like self-scheduling,better nurse-to-patient ratios and no forced overtime would help retain and entice nurses back into the public sector.

Nurses' union in favour, demands ban on forced OT

The province's largest nurses' union,theFdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec(FIQ), is in favour of the government's plan to prioritize nurses in the public sector,although it believes it should have happened sooner.

"It's the nurses in the public sector that we have asked to put their lives to the side for a long time, so it's only fair that we prioritize them before those in the private sector," said Patrick Guay, vice-president of the FIQ.

Guay said the government'sfocus should also be on eliminating forced overtime. This weekend, the FIQ took matters into its own hands, with more than 30,000 of its members in a dozen regions refusing to work mandatory overtime.

The union also sent formal notices to local and provincial health authorities, giving them a Nov. 15 deadline to eliminate the practice or face action from the FIQ.

President of the Quebec Nurses' Association, Natalie Stake-Doucet, says forced overtime in the public sector must be banned, adding it's the main reason why nurses are leaving for the private sector. (Jean-Claude Taliana/CBC)

Thispriority is shared by registered nurse and president of Quebec's Nurses'Association,Natalie Stake-Doucet, who saysforced overtime is the main issue.

"[It's] an issue with management, not anissue with the shortage of nurses. It's anissue that we've had for 25years,no matter the amount of nurses that we've had in the public health-care system," she said.

Quebec Health Minister ChristianDub has said he hopes to present concrete measures to improve working conditions in the health-care system this week. He saidthe province is looking at alternatives to mandatory overtime, but getting rid of it isn't something that can happen overnight.

Since promising thefinancial bonuses, the province says 1,800 nurses have been hired, have come back to work or have moved to full-time positions.

The HealthMinistry says it'sin discussions with close to 2,400 other potentialcandidates.

Dubsaidnurses want to see a culture change on the job and thathe's committed to making that happen.

With files from Chloe Ranaldi