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New Brunswick

Province agrees to join talks between nursing homes and union

The provincial government agreed Monday to sit at the bargaining table as nursing home workers and their employers try to reach a contract and end the threat of a strike.

Union, which already has strike mandate, has wanted government at talks because it holds the money

Sharon Teare, the president of the New Brunswick Council of Nursing Home Unions, says negotiations can only go so far when government isn't at the bargaining table. (Radio-Canada file photo)

The provincial government agreed Monday to sit at the bargaining table as nursing home workers and their employers try to reach a contract and end the threat of a strike.

Any deal would still be between the New Brunswick Council of Nursing Home Unions, represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, and the New Brunswick Association of Nursing Homes, the non-profit organization that represents all 68 licensed nursing homes in the province.

But the union has maintained the province needs to be part of negotiations since only the government, not the nursing home association, can authorize more money.

In a statement Monday afternoon, Social Development Minister Dorothy Shephard said the province had accepted the invitation of the association to come to the bargaining table

Talks resumed earlier in the day after the province went to court to prevent the union from starting a strike for 10 days.

Earlier in the day, unionpresidentSharonTearesaid negotiations couldonly go so far without anyone from government present.

The Department of Social Development controls the funding, she said.

"If they want a resolution to this, they need to come to the table," Teare said.

The union and the association have been negotiatingfor 28 months.More than 4,100 workers at 46 non-profit nursing homes are involved in the contract dispute, asking for pay raises, improved working conditions and more funded hours of care.

Other CUPE members rallied in solidarity with nursing home workers on Saturday. The nursing home workers had expected to go on strike on Sunday morning, but a court order changed those plans. (Jordan Gill/CBC)

"I think the government needs to own this crisis," Teare said.

Shephard said the nursing home association and CUPE have always been able to come to an agreements.

"I find it unusual that this union did not take a strike vote before the last election," she said, referring to the Sept. 24 provincial vote that eventually resulted in the Progressive Conservatives taking charge of government, replacing the Liberals.

"They had a government that was prone to spending, spending, spending, going into a very close election."

Shephardpointed to a provinciallaw passedin 2009 to ensure some nursing home staff would remain on the job in the event of a strike. But a December 2018 labour board decision said that lawviolates collective bargaining rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Social Development Minister Dorothy Shephard wondered why the union didn't take a strike vote when the Liberals were in power, since they would have been more willing to spend on nursing home care. (CBC )

"And because of a ruling in December that gives them the right to walk out of the nursing home en masse, they took a strike vote," Shephard said.

Nursing home workers voted overwhelming in favour of a strikeand announced on Saturday that they would walk out on Sunday. The province then went to the Court of Queen's Bench and secured a delay in the strike.

I really think MinsterShephardand the minister of finance need to be at the table.- CecileCassista, Coalitionfor Seniors and Nursing Home Residents' Rights

It is possible the workers could strike after the 10 days are up, and they are allowed to hold protests in the meantime,which they weredoing at some homes on Monday.

Cecile Cassista,the executive director of the Coalition for Seniors and Nursing Home Residents' Rights in the province, called the situation a "huge crisis."

She said the contract dispute is a "prime example" of why senior care belongs under the umbrella of the Department of Health.

Cassista said the third-party system doesn't seem to work, and saidgovernment needs to deal with the negotiationsfirst-hand, rather than through the nursing home association.

"I really think MinsterShephard and the minister of finance need to be at the table," Cassista said."They need to be there to hear from the workers."

Shephard's statement didn't say who would represent the province at the bargaining table.

Cecile Cassista, executive director of the Coalition for Seniors and Nursing Home Residents' Rights, had called for government to get involved in the dispute. (CBC)

Cassista said she has heard from worried family members concerned about apotential strike as well as about staffing shortages.

She said a friend of hers whose brother is in a home didn't receive his breakfast until 10:30 a.m. because of staffing shortages.

Cassista said she disagreed with the government's implementation of the stay order.

"Collective bargaining has to take its course," she said, adding that prolonging the standoff will only make things worse.

With files from Information Morning Fredericton, Moncton