SoVote

Decentralized Democracy

Ontario Assembly

43rd Parl. 1st Sess.
November 16, 2022 09:00AM
  • Nov/16/22 9:30:00 a.m.
  • Re: Bill 36 

I want to talk real quick about what’s not in the bill. There’s nothing in the bill to repeal Bill 124. There’s nothing in this bill to protect the greenbelt. There’s nothing in this bill that’s going to double ODSP and OW. There’s no plan to reach four hours of care per day for residents in long-term care. There is no apology from this government that 5,000 seniors have died in long-term care—our parents, our grandparents, our brothers, our sisters. There is nothing to stop the gouging by oil companies that my colleague just talked about, nothing to stop the gouging with the cost of food at grocery stores by families who are billionaires.

My question to you is, why do you think none of these important issues for the province of Ontario are in the fall economic statement?

There’s nothing in this bill that talks about the gouging at the grocery stores. There’s nothing in it talking about the gouging by the oil companies. Our food banks are at record levels, as you already said. There’s nothing in here to repeal Bill 124, an attack against workers, mostly women. ODSP and OW are poverty rates, without a doubt.

But I think the main question that I think we all should be concerned about is about our food supply, our water, our air.

Why do you think there is nothing in here to protect the greenbelt?

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  • Nov/16/22 1:30:00 p.m.

It’s my honour to rise today to discuss our NDP motion to recruit and retain more front-line health care workers. This is an incredibly important motion. When you have a government that introduces legislation like Bill 124 during a global pandemic, capping the wages of our burnt-out front-line health care staff, you end up with a crisis in staffing.

In September of this year, the president of Niagara Health released a statement about the challenges created by the staffing crisis in health care:

“There is no bigger issue facing Ontario hospitals today than the serious shortage of health-care workers.

“These challenges are unprecedented and something we will be dealing with for years to come.”

This comes after another statement from Niagara Health in July, noting that the Niagara Health system was trying to fill a total of 608 positions, 608 vacancies, across the region of Niagara in our hospital system. Think about that. There are almost 5,000 patients awaiting non-emergency surgeries that have been postponed. Across the province of Ontario, emergency departments have had to close more than 86 times due to staffing shortages just since this summer. We see the results of the staffing shortages almost every day in my office.

This government introduced Bill 124, and it was a slap in the face to our brave front-line health care workers and other workers in the province of Ontario. It should be immediately repealed. This legislation has no place in a province of Ontario that respects workers.

We know that this government does not respect workers. They attack workers’ rights all the time. The labour minister, Monte McNaughton, supported Bill 124, the attack against workers, the attack against collective agreements, the attack against seniority. Also under a Conservative government, under Harris, they laid off 6,000 nurses.

Speaker, we know about how the province’s vacancies from nursing jobs have increased almost 300% since the start of the pandemic. Turnover rates for RPNs and PSWs have doubled in the last six years. Why do you think that’s the case? Maybe my colleagues can help me. Can we all say “Bill 124”?

Early retirements of nurses have doubled. Our health care staff are burnt-out, exhausted, leaving the profession they love because they just can’t do it anymore. They’re the people who showed up every single day of the pandemic to protect us—front-line health care workers.

This is a crisis. And where is this government? Nowhere to be found. Front-line health care workers have been telling them directly that they need to act to address this crisis. Five of the biggest health care unions wrote a joint letter to the Premier—think about this—asking him to address this crisis. As of last week, no response from the Premier—no mask, either. This government would rather attack the collective bargaining rights of workers than fix this problem.

Speaker, we need a serious plan for the staffing crisis in our health care system. And do you know how to start? It starts by repealing Bill 124. That’s the first step in fixing this incredible problem. Because Bill 124 froze wages, including for nurses, they have taken—think about this—with the rate of inflation, a 6% pay cut during this time. It’s unacceptable. Frankly, it’s another attack on the collective bargaining rights of workers. We need to repeal Bill 124 immediately—

Interjection.

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