Gallant government accused of targeting women with privatization - Action News
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New Brunswick

Gallant government accused of targeting women with privatization

The New Brunswick Coalition for Pay Equity and Green Party Leader David Coon say the Gallant government's plans to privatize hospital support services and cut jobs in education will disproportionately affect women.

David Coon and pay equity group say women hold most jobs in hospital support services and education

The New Brunswick Coalition for Pay Equity is calling on the Gallantgovernment to reverse its decision to privatize hospital support services, saying the majority of the targeted jobs are held by women.

A health-care worker with shoulder-length brown hair and glasses, wearing burgandy scrubs and white medical gloves, wipes down a hospital bed railing.
The New Brunswick Coalition for Pay Equity says most of the jobs in the three hospital support services targeted for privatization are held by women. (CBC)
"We are deeply concerned about the impact that privatization of these services could have on pay equity,"Vallie Stearns said in a statement.

Nearly 90 per cent of employees in hospital food services are women, about 80 per cent in environmental services, and 40 per cent of porters,according to the coalition.

"Women should not bear the burden of deficit reduction," said Stearns.

A 2014 study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativesfound that women's wages were lower in the private sector than in the public sector, while men's wages were higher in the private sector, she said.

Green Party Leader David Coon agrees privatizing non-medical work in hospitals and cutting jobs in education will have gender-based effects.

"Cuts [that]will come as a result of privatizing the management of those services will fall disproportionately on women," he said.

"Sixty-fiveper cent or more of people working in education services teachers and administrationare womenand we're seeing 302 job losses there, which disproportionately fall on women, so it just continuesa pace."

Earlier this week, Progressive Conservative MLA Jody Carr argueddaycare funding changes slated to take effect in June also amount to a cut targeted at women.

Carr saidreducing the subsidy to the owners of for-profit daycares will force them to close or increase fees, thereby decreasing access to daycare services.

Coon contends rather than targeting women, the government should increase the corporate tax rate and make businesses pay more.

He claims atax rate equal to Nova Scotia's would generate $68million in new revenue.