Yukon government offers cash bonuses to attract and keep nurses - Action News
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Yukon government offers cash bonuses to attract and keep nurses

The Yukon government is offering cashbonuses for some nurses who choose to work in the territory. It's an attempt to fill a number of vacant community nursing positions and reduce turnover.

'An awful lot of other people deserve and should get something like this as well,' union says

A smiling woman stands at a podium.
Health Minister Tracy-Anne McPheesaid the bonuses 'will make the Yukon more competitive in recruiting and retaining nurses in a very challenging labour market.' (Paul Tukker/CBC)

The Yukon government is offering cashbonuses for some nurses who choose to work in the territory. It's an attempt to fill a number of vacant community nursing positions and reduce turnover.

Health Minister Tracy-Anne McPheeannounced $6 million to go toward signing and retention bonuses for nurses who workfor the territorial government.

In a written statement, McPhee said the bonuses "will make the Yukon more competitive in recruiting and retaining nurses in a very challenging labour market."

In October, McPheesaid Yukon was dealing with a "very, very serious" vacancy rate in community nursing, saying it was then over 40 per cent. Typically, she said, the vacancy rate would be about five per cent.

The new bonuses will go to registered nurses, nurse practitioners and licensed practical nurses over the next two years:

  • an immediate$15,000, anda $15,000 retention bonus starting April,for registered nurses and nurse practitioners.
  • an immediate$8,000, and an $8,000 retention bonus starting in April, for licensed practical nurses.
  • a signing bonus of $7,500 for new registered nurses and nurse practitioners, and $4,500 for licensed practical nurses.

The government is also offering a $10,000 bonus to primary care nurses (and nurses in charge) working in Yukon communities, and will also reimburse exam fees for new nursing graduates hired by the territory.

The bonus package is the result of an agreement with the Yukon Employees' Union (YEU), which represents some of the territory's nurses.

YEU president Steve Geicksaid he hopes the bonuses work, but he's skeptical. The union had argued wage increases were a better way to go, as bonuses aren't pensionable or reflected in severance.

"They [the government] are expecting quite a lot out of this, and you know,I think the whole point, yes, is to retain the few people that they have left and encourage others to come," he said.

"This is the path that the government has chosen to go down, and I guess we'll have to wait and see."

Yukon Employees Union President Steve Geick stands in front of the Whitehorse General Hospital with a black cap on.
Yukon Employees' Union president Steve Geick says he hopes the bonuses work, to attract and keep more nurses in Yukon. 'I guess we'll have to wait and see,' he said. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

Geick said the bonuses won't affect contract negotiations between the union and the government, set to resume later this month.

But he said the new bonuses createa rift between nurses and other government workers.

"We're getting calls and emails from people that work that aren't nurses saying, 'What about me?'" Geick said.

"You know, an awful lot of other people deserve and should get something like this as well."

With files from Joseph Ho