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Ottawa

City seeks to triple new paramedic hires as ambulance demand soars

The City of Ottawa wants totriple the number of new paramedic hires next year as emergency responders struggleafter several high-stressyears, and calls for ambulances soar.

Paramedics make more claims related to trauma and stress on the job

More than a half dozen ambulances parked outside the emergency department of a hospital.
More than a half dozen City of Ottawa ambulances are seen parked outside the emergency department of the Civic campus of the Ottawa Hospital in May 2022. (Kate Porter/CBC)

The City of Ottawa wants totriple the number of new paramedic hires next year as the demand for ambulances soars andemergency responders struggleafter several high-stressyears.

In a report going before a city committeeon June 15, paramedic chief Pierre Poirier sets outa strategyto add40 full-time positions in each of the next three annual city budgets. In 2024, the paramedic service would also add three full-time staff focused on psychological supports for employees.

That's a sizable jumpfrom the 14 paramedic staff added annually in recent years, butthe city continues to fall short in its ability to send ambulances when residents call for them.

Ottawa's problem has gotten worse with each passing year, and the city points to the long hours paramedicsspend waiting to offload patients at local hospitals. The city's paramedics were in that"level zero" situation a record-breaking 1,806 times in 2022, more than double the previous record-setting year in 2021.

"Level zero poses a significant risk to public safety," Poirier states in his annual report.

At the same time, demand is growing. Paramedics responded 184,113 timeslast year, a 23per cent increase from 2021. Provincewide, demand for ambulances isincreasing faster than thepopulation, Poiriersaid.

The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated pre-existing problems in health care, he explained, which worsened the situation for paramedics. The result: Ottawa's paramedic servicefailed to meet its benchmarks for responding to life-threatening and urgent calls, afterhaving met them from 2018 to 2020.

"The data is troubling," said Coun. Riley Brockington, who chairs the emergency and protective services committee."We believe this is a top priority. We believe that adding additional resources will help address this problem."

Provincial health system vs. municipal paramedics

The City of Ottawa doesn't plan topay for all those hires, however. Poirier proposes splitting the cost of 23 new positions annuallywith the province, which is the existing cost-sharing arrangement, while asking the Ministry of Health to fully pay for the other17.

Mayor Mark Sutcliffe should askthe province to take on that full cost51 positions in total over three budget cycles because delays offloading patients into emergency departmentsare due tothe provincial health-care system, staff argue.

Myriad programs have been put in place in recent years to speed things up, from having dedicated nurses take on ambulance patients to expanding powers of paramedics so a trip to the ER is not theonly option.

"There's only so much the City of Ottawa can do," said Brockington.

"We can flood the city with more paramedics, which will help with our response times, but there will still be long queues at the hospital when we get there to offload patients."

A photo of Councillor Riley Brockington in June 2023
Coun. Riley Brockington, chair of Ottawa's emergency and protective services committee, says the city can only do so much about ambulance problems caused by delays at emergency departments, which are part of a provincial health-care system. (Elyse Skura/CBC)

Hannah Jensen, aspokesperson for the health minister, suggested the province doesn't intend to cover those 17 new positions.

Health minister Sylvia Jones met with Mayor Sutcliffe just this weekand they discussedthe $2.6million the province put into aprogram for nurses dedicated to caring for patients arrivingby ambulance. Ontario also paid to boost ambulance availability by more than30,000 hours last year, Jensen wrote in an email.

"Should Mayor Sutcliffe and Ottawa city council want to increase their budget, the province will be there to match that request," Jensen said.

WSIB claims grow

The union that represents the city's hundreds of paramedics and dispatchers is focused on the actions of councilrather than the province.

CUPE Local 503called for more staff to be added to the 2023 budget rather than waiting until 2024.

"To wait for the province to respond, to wait for the province to solve a health-care system issue, is not in the best interest of members who are on the front lines and clearly showing signs, symptoms," said treasurer Carrie Lynn Poole-Cotnam.

Poirier's report does state claims for traumaticor stressful workplace events are on the rise.An average of 60staff were on leave each month last year for injuries covered by theWorkplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB), compared to just 11 per monthin 2016. Paramedics are also calling in sick more often.

A photo of Carrie Lynn Poole-Cotnam, secretary-treasurer of CUPE Local 503 in Ottawa.
Carrie Lynn Poole-Cotnam, secretary-treasurer of CUPE Local 503 in Ottawa, says the city can't rely on paramedics consistently working overtime. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

"The mental strain of showing up to work to do a very difficult job and knowing that the cards are stacked against you does take a toll," said Poole-Cotnam.

Paramedicshad been routinely doing extra hours at the endof their shifts and offered overtime, but the city says interestin the extra paid time has dropped.

"When you start to rely on overtime ...that should be a clear message to the city that the staffing levels are not adequate to meet the needs," said Poole-Cotnam.