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Yukon government, union reach agreement to solve rural nurse shortage

The Yukon government and the Yukon Employees Union have agreed to a new plan to alleviate the chronic nursing shortage in rural communities. Nurses will be allowed to work part-time, on a rotational basis.

Nurses will be able to work part-time, on rotational basis in communities

A community nurse at work in Carcross. (CBC)

The Yukon government has reached an agreement with the Yukon Employees Union that may solve a chronic nursing shortage in rural communities.

The agreement will allow for community nurses to work part-time, on a rotational basis.

Health department spokesperson Pat Living saidauxiliary on-call nurses, flown in from the south, suggested the concept.

"A lot of these folks have said to us that they wouldn't mind working permanent, they just didn't want to work full time," Living said. She said two nurses could jobshare, alternating in and out.

Living saidit won't cost the government any more than the current situation, and other jurisdictions already offer nurses the same flexibility.

"We have housing for our nurses in rural Yukon and we're already paying for these people to fly in.This just gives us the ability to fill these positions permanently and give some continuity of nurses in a community," Living said

Opposition politicians have complained about nursing care in rural communities, saying staff shortages mean nurses are getting burned out, putting patients' health at risk.

Union president Steve Geick welcomes the territorial government's new plan. He said similar options should be offered to other government employees.