Seven Oaks hospital slashing full-time hours for some support staff this fall - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:21 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Seven Oaks hospital slashing full-time hours for some support staff this fall

A health-care union is crying foulafter learningSeven Oaks General Hospital willcutfull-time hours for 32support staffthis fall.

CUPE 204 calls on health minister to halt planned conversion of ER before bumping process begins

Around 250 protesters gathered outside Seven Oaks General Hospital last month to criticize the decision to close the hospital's emergency room. Some support staff who received deletion notices this month found there will not be new full-time positions to apply for. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

A health-care union is crying foulafter learningSeven Oaks General Hospital willcut full-time hours for 32workersthis fall.

The support staff are among169 workers represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees whoreceived deletion noticesat the northwest Winnipeg hospital which is converting its emergency department into an urgent care centre inSeptember.

That means the positions are being cut, but the employees areeligible to apply for other positions. But when those 32 support workers looked through new staff rotations for the fall, they found no full-time positions available in those wards, CUPE 204 presidentDebbie Boissonneaultsaid Wednesday.

"It kind of made me sick to my stomach," Boissonneault said of her initial reaction.

"These people have to pay for their houses. They have to pay their mortgages. They have to buy food. They have to continue to live," she said."For [the health authority]to not make any full-time positions is really hard."

New schedules based on need: WRHA

She said there are a number of part-time positions at0.8 full-time equivalent or less they canapply for, butthe affectedsupport staff are frustrated.

"The health care aides that actually get the patients up in the morning they wash them, they walk them, they feed them, they do some physio stuff with them all of those people, not one of them will have a full-time job in those new areas of the hospital," she said.

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authoritydeveloped the new schedules based on the "operational needs of the site," according to a spokesperson, who said full-time positionsremain elsewhere at the hospital in wards not affected by these changes.

"Our intent remains developing schedules that best meet the needs for patient care."

Staff at Seven Oaks General Hospital affected by the pending closure of the emergency room will be able to apply for new positions next week. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The WRHA added most of the staff who received deletion notices already work part-time hours. They all work in the urgent care, medicine and geriatricrehabilitation wards.

The elimination of full-time work has been described by health-care officials as a "funding issue," Boissonneaultsaid, but she said theWRHA did notprovide further clarity.

Some CUPE members are thinking of resigning so they can find a full-time position elsewhere, she said.

"They're just so upset that they don't know which way to turn."

The status of the 169 workers represented byCUPE 204 is in flux as they await the process of filling new positions at the hospital based on seniority.

Boissonneault described theadjustments, which start next Monday, asa "bumping" process, through which employeeschoose new staff rotations. First choices are offered to senior staff, and younger workers may be left out.

She wrote a letter calling onHealth Minister Cameron Friesento reverse course on the planned closure of the ER,before the "disruptive and demoralizing"filling of positions takes place.

"Once we go down this path, it will be very difficult to turn back time, and with morale so low we are very concerned for the well-being of our members," Boissonneault said in the letter.

ER on fragile ground

Residents hoped the ER would be saved when Dr. David Peachey was hiredto review the second phaseof Winnipeg's hospital reorganization plan a reorganization launched by the province in 2017, based on Peachey's initial recommendations.

However, Peachey'sPhase 2 review recommended continuing with the ER closures, including the Seven Oaks conversion, but changing the timeline if therisk assessment suggests that's needed.

Peachey's report said the sustainability of Seven Oaks' ER is at risk because emergency department staff are seeking work elsewhere to avoid the hospital's uncertainty.

The same staffing woes prompted the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority to expeditethe closureof Concordia Hospital's ER also converted to an urgent care centre by three weeks.

"By continuing on the path of closing the Seven Oaks ER and [intensive care unit], this government is only going to make a bad plan worse," Boissonneault said in her letter.

The province's health minister has previously saidhiring Peachey demonstrates the government is listening to concerns and willing to make adjustments when needed.

He argued the province must continue to overhaul a health-care system plagued bylong wait times.

Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this story indicated that the 32 support workers found no full-time positions in new staff rotations for the fall. In fact, they found no full-time positions available specifically in the wards affected by changes.
    Jun 13, 2019 11:58 AM CT