Nurses organize to champion contract demands, raise awareness over 'threats' to public health care - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 11:15 AM | Calgary | 6.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Nurses organize to champion contract demands, raise awareness over 'threats' to public health care

In March, talks between the union and the Ontario Hospital Association ended without an agreement, sending the partiestoarbitrationexpected to start sometime early next month.

Ontario Nurses' Association has been calling for an improved contract for some 60,000 members since January

Members of the Ontario Nurses' Association hold a rally outside the Sheraton hotel, in downtown Toronto, on March 2, 2023.
Members of the Ontario Nurses' Association hold a rally outside the Sheraton hotel, in downtown Toronto, on March 2, 2023. Nurses are expected to organize Sunday as part of "community day of action." (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Nurses areexpected togather across Ontario for a "community day of action" to championtheir contract demands and raise awareness over what they say are threats to Ontario's publicly-funded hospital and health care system.

The Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) has been calling for an improved contract for some 60,000 members in the hospital sector since talks started earlier this year. In March, talks between the union and the Ontario Hospital Association ended without an agreement, sending the partiestoarbitrationexpected to start sometime early next month.

"Simply put, our patients need and deserve better care," ONAinterim provincial president Bernie Robinson,who is also a registered nurse, said in a news release.

"The failure to properly invest in our public hospital system is hurting those who rely on quality care."

ONA represents 68,000 registered nurses and 18,000 nursing student affiliates. Itsays the community events planned for Sunday are also aimed at educating the public on how the Doug Fordgovernment'spolicy on hospital and health care is hurting Ontariansparticularly taking aim at the province's recent move to start expanding care, such as some surgeries and procedures, in private and for-profit clinics.

"As front-line nurses and health-care professionals, we're informing people of the threats to their health care and making it easy for them to take steps to bring back better care for all," said Robinson.

CBC Toronto has reached out to the province and the Ontario HospitalAssociation, which represents140 public hospitals,for comment. Back in March, when nurses organized a separate demonstration, Ford commented on the province'srelationship with nurses.

"We love our nurses. We know the dedication. They go in day in and day out," Ford said when criticized by the official opposition on its treatment of nurses.

"We're going to continue hiring nurses. There's 30,000 nurses in our colleges and universities ready to serve. We're grateful and we think the world of our nurses."

The nurses, and other broader public sector workers, have been subject for three years to a wage restraint law known as Bill 124, which capped increases at one per cent a year. An Ontario court found Bill 124 unconstitutional late last year, but thegovernment has fileda notice of intent to appeal.

Hospital nurses currently earn $34.24 an hour as a starting salary, per their last contract, and are subject to a grid that goes up to 25 years, when they can earn $49.02 an hour. The current contract expired onMarch 31.