N.S. premier clarifies that nurses on maternity leave will receive $10K retention bonus - Action News
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Nova Scotia

N.S. premier clarifies that nurses on maternity leave will receive $10K retention bonus

"In the case of those people on maternity leave, they are eligible for the bonus, for sure," Premier Tim Houston said during question period on Wednesday.

Initial confusion over eligibility has been frustrating, one nurse on mat leave says

Premier Tim Houston is seen speaking in a reporter scrum.
Premier Tim Houston says he's 'looking at clarification on some of the inclusions' for the nurse retention bonus. (Robert Short/CBC)

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says nurses who are currently on maternity leave will receive a recently announced $10,000 bonus, amid some confusion about eligibility.

"In the case of those people on maternity leave, they are eligible for the bonus, for sure," Houston said during question period on Wednesday.

It comes two days after the provincial government announcedthe bonus plan for nurses and other health-care workers as a "thank you" to those who've worked in the past year.The retention incentives for nurses include a $10,000bonus to registered nurses, licensed practical nurses andnurse practitioners working in the province, another $10,000 next year to nurses who promise to continueworking until 2026. Another $10,000 is available to nurses "who have left the public system and who agree and are selected to return with a two-year return of service agreement signed before March 31, 2023."

Houston, who told reporters Wednesday the incentive had been in the works for "quite some time," says he'll continue to clarify who is and who isn't included.

"A policy like that is never perfect off the top, but it is progress and we'll continue to make progress on that," he said.

'Undervalued and underappreciated'

But somenurses on maternity leave say they had heard from the Nova Scotia Government and General Employees Union that, depending on when their leave began, they were ineligible for the bonus.

"The fact that the timing of when my baby was born excludes me from benefits or a bonus that other people will be getting really just makes you feel undervalued and underappreciated as a nurse and someone trying to raise their family in this province," said Heather Clancy,who works as a nurse inthe Halifax Infirmary's emergency department. "[It] doesn't seem sustainable, to be honest."

Clancysaid in an interview that she began her maternity leave in April 2022, with plans to return to work in late April. But she said initially, they were told that employees who hadn'tworked in the 2022-2023fiscal year up until March 20, were ineligible.

Rachel Alexander, who also works as a nurse at the Halifax Infirmary and is currently on maternity leave, said the initial confusion over eligibility has been frustrating.

"I was certainly unimpressed," she said. "Tim Houston, you're saying to all of these women who have worked health care and given up their bodies, their backs, their minds because we went off to take care of our bodies and our babies for one year, out of the three years of the pandemic we don't qualify. That's absurd."

Alexander said information about the eligibility rules has been vague since the announcement was made.

When asked by Liberal LeaderZach Churchill about the parameters of the retention bonus on Wednesday, Houston replied: "Sometimes you don't get these things perfect. We're looking at clarification on some of the inclusions on that and we'll continue to look at that. We want health-care workers to know they're respected, they're valued, and things are getting better despite what you might hear to the contrary."

A man wearing a grey blazer with a blue shirt and blue tie stands in front of a staircase.
Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Zach Churchill at Province House on Wednesday. He said he felt the Progress Conservatives rushed the incentive bonus. (Pat Callaghan/CBC)

Churchill later told reporters he heard from nurses who were on sick leave for injuries and serious illness who said theywouldn't qualify for the bonus. He said he feels the creation of the incentive was rushed.

"This is a government Ido think is very reactive, that rushes a lot of decisions and I think this decision was rushed. They're looking at coming into the legislature facing the fact vacancies have increased with nurses in the province and wanted to have an answer coming in here," he said.

Churchill said the bonus should be available for all nurses.

A woman with short brown curly hair wears an orange blazer. She is standing in front of a staircase.
Nova Scotia NDP Leader Claudia Chender said Wednesday at Province House that all nurses deserve the $10,000 bonus. (Pat Callaghan/CBC)

NDP Leader Claudia Chenderagreed with Churchill, sayingthe bonus felt rushed and that all nurses should get them.

Chendersaid she's heard from nurses who were told they are not receiving the incentive for various reasons from maternity leave to being a permanent, but not full-time employee.

"In particular with the nurses on maternity leave, this is a problem throughout the professional universe. If you choose to have a child as a woman, you pay a penalty financially and career-wise and this would be one more penalty on top of that," Chender told reporters on Wednesday.

"If you work full time and decide to have a baby, does that mean that you didn't work full time and shouldn't be thanked or are less worthy of being retained? In my opinion, no."

With files from Jean Laroche and Michael Gorman