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Ontario CCACs making patients choose between care and support for their caregiver

Support for striking workers continues to grow. Last week, Tammy McCormick Ferguson, a patient of CarePartners, who communicates through an  iPad because of a neurological disorder that has left her non-verbal, sent a note to the striking staff and to the media calling the nurses’ working conditions “appalling,” comparing their compensation to that of “dog walkers.”

Niagara (22 April 2015) — Striking staff at a Niagara-area home nursing agency say they are alarmed that the Community Care Access Centre (CCAC) is not providing reasonable alternate arrangements for patients who up until recently had been in their care.

CarePartners not providing appropriate alternate arrangements during labour dispute

The 130 workers say some of their former home care patients are being driven by taxi to clinics operated by their employer during the strike.

“The CCAC should withhold referrals to CarePartners until the labour dispute is resolved,” says Warren (Smokey) Thomas, President of the 130,000-member Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU/NUPGE). “Instead the CCAC is placing these patients in a situation where they are forced to take sides in this labour dispute.”

Patients continue to support workers to achieve improved working conditions

Despite the difficult position the CCAC has placed them in, home care patients have been showing support for their caregivers. Last week, Tammy McCormick Ferguson, who communicates through an  iPad because of a neurological disorder that has left her non-verbal, sent a note to the striking staff and to the media calling the nurses’ working conditions “appalling,” comparing their compensation to that of “dog walkers.”

“Myself and some 70,000 people in Ontario are able to stay in our homes and save the government millions of dollars because of community nurses who care for their patients,” writes McCormick Ferguson.

CCAC needs to stop referring patients to CarePartners until dispute is resolved

During last year’s ParaMed strike in Renfrew County, the Champlain CCAC stopped  new referrals well before the strike date and transferred patients to alternate home care agencies based on their level of acuity.

While CarePartners claims it cannot afford to give these workers basic provisions that are common to other professional and support staff in the sector, they appear to have an endless budget for taxi cabs and paid security to deal with a peaceful picket line entering into its fifth day.

No new dates for bargaining have been set

CarePartners claims publicly it is willing to come back to the bargaining table, but has not given any new bargaining dates to the union.

Care Partners is a private for-profit agency under contract to the Community Care Access Centre. The agency delivers nursing services including oncology, dialysis, pediatric, wound and diabetic care.

NUPGE

The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 340,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good. NUPGE