THOMAS: Message to the OHA — recovery will take action, not just talk

The following Op Ed by OPSEU/SEFPO President Warren (Smokey) Thomas was published today in the Toronto Sun.

The third wave of COVID-19 has arrived and many folks are scratching their heads wondering how Ontario’s entire health-care system — and economy — can come to a crippling halt with between 400 and 600 COVID-19 patients in the ICU.

It’s unbelievable and it’s certainly unsustainable; With a population of 15 million people, we should have much more hospital capacity. The consequences of inaction are fatal.

Which begs the question: Where has the talking head of the Ontario Hospital Association (OHA) been, and has the OHA fulfilled its mandate to serve Ontario’s hospitals to build a better health-care system?

Let’s just say, our current hospital capacity crisis didn’t happen overnight. It’s been a disaster in the making for 30 years. “Crisis” isn’t just a COVID-19 buzzword — it’s a daily reality for thousands of front-line hospital workers and the patients they support.

At OPSEU/SEFPO, we’ve sounded the alarm. And not just this year, but for the past 30 years since the slash-and-burn “Common Sense Revolution” of the 1990s when the pillaging of our health-care system started.

OHA president and CEO Anthony Dale was around back then too, serving as an aide to Premier Mike Harris — the King of Cuts — and his Minister of Health and Long-Term Care Elizabeth Witmer.

Their government’s deep cuts and costly restructuring gutted Ontario’s health-care system and charted the course for austerity — lasting 30 years and leading to the crisis we’re in today.

Harris’s cocktail of cuts were a recipe for disaster. We’ve known it was coming. How can a hospital deal with a pandemic surge when it hasn’t got the resources — or staffing — to handle the seasonal flu?

We’ve been in dire straits for some time, and it doesn’t take a doctor to know why.

Nowadays, Dale is warning that Ontario’s critical care system is about to reach its “saturation point.” That’s the point at which there’s no more capacity — zero. And he’s right. We’re close to system-wide collapse. He’s right about a few other things too.

Ontario’s hospitals can’t function at peak capacity in the long-term. We need more standby capacity, or put plainly, more buffer room.

We need to get shots into people’s arms and to improve vaccine confidence among the general public. We need paid sick days for essential workers and we all need to follow public health measures to help curb the impact of this third — and hopefully final — wave.

And of course, we absolutely need to invest in staffing and job training to address staff shortages in critical care and every other health service, which are all at a crisis level.

We agree completely. We’ve been saying it for 30 years, while we’ve been on the front lines of the fight to protect and improve our public health-care system – on the ground and in the halls of power at Queen’s Park.

But recently, when our union called on the OHA to take action and support the vaccine rollout in hospitals by removing barriers for front line staff — by directing hospitals to give workers time to get vaccinated — all we heard back were crickets.

Actions speak louder than words, which raises the question: What has the OHA actually done?

The OHA has been AWOL — absent without leadership. That needs to change. Yes, there have been enough mistakes to go around and nobody has done a perfect job.

It’s time we take a different approach — one that’s consultative and constructive. It’s time for the OHA to sit down with the unions so we can address the capacity crisis head on, together.

There’s been plenty of talk about rebuilding our health-care system. It’s time to get to work. And supporting front-line essential workers will be the foundation of our province’s recovery.

Then. Now. Always.

  • Warren (Smokey) Thomas is president of OPSEU/SEFPO
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Region 5 New Activist /New Steward Class: Application Package – Deadline April 16, 2021

The Region 5 Education Committee is pleased to offer this virtual
educational opportunity to our Region 5 members. We would like to
invite all members of Region 5 to participate in our upcoming zoom
classes on:

NEW ACTIVIST / NEW STEWARD ORIENTATION

There are two session offerings.

DATES:

Option #1 will run two consecutive 3 hour evenings Tuesday, June 8,
2021 and Wednesday June 9, 2021 6:00 pm – 9:15 pm

Option #2 will run one day Saturday June 12, 2021 9:30 am – 4:30 pm

Registration Deadline: Friday, April 16, 2021 4:30 pm at R5Educationals@opseu.org.

Virtual Meetings: Participation instructions will be provided to all
upon confirmation of acceptance.

Please find attached:

Call-Out Package: New Activist / New Steward Orientation

Human Rights Accommodation Form

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OPSEU/SEFPO’s Rainbow Alliance Arc-en-Ciel Queermunity Town Halls!

Attention all rainbow-identified members: OPSEU/SEFPO’s Rainbow Alliance arc-en-ciel (RAA) will be holding monthly Queermunity town halls via Zoom on the last Wednesday of each month!

Be sure to join them as they discuss queer issues, chat about upcoming events and host guest speakers!

Add your name to the Queermunity email list! Your welcome email will include the Zoom information.

Dates and times

April 28, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
May 26, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
June 30, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
July 28, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
August 25, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
September 29, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
October 27, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30pm
November 24, 2021 7:30pm – 8:30 pm

Cost: Free

If you have any questions or would like to be a guest speaker, please email pride@opseu.org Click here for a printable PDF of the poster

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Lawson coding for COVID-19 screening shifts

UPDATE: The information provided below was erroneous. Any hours work as a screener during your regular work hours would be coded as 01. Hours worked as screener outside of regular hours would be coded as CO19. Hours screened from 6 pm to 12 am are also additionally coded “evening bonus” and weekend hours are additionally coded as “weekend bonus”.

CAMH has informed OPSEU Local 500 leadership that all hours of COVID-19 screening should be coded in Lawson as CO19. Evening shifts (i.e., after 6 pm) should also be coded as “evening premium” and weekend shifts should also be coded as “weekend premium”.

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Virtual Healing Circles

CAMH has hired an outside facilitator to create a safe & brave space for staff to share experiences with anti-Black racism and horizontal violence at CAMH and beyond.

For Black staff only:
Tuesday July 28, 9:30 – 11:30 AM
Thursday July 30, 1:30-3:30 PM
Thursday August 6, 9:30-11:30 PM
Saturday August 8, 10:00 AM-12:00 PM
Sunday August 16, 3:00 -5:00 PM

All staff welcome:
Tuesday August 4, 1:30-3:30 PM
Tuesday August 11, 9:30-11:30 AM

Registration: https://bit.ly/CAMHHealingCircles
For more information contact Carol.Bennett@camh.ca
Registration is required due to attendance limits for each session to allow for effective facilitation.
Please note your participation is kept confidential.

 

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OPSEU Local 500 Statement on Pandemic Pay at CAMH

Dear Sisters, Brothers and Members of OPSEU Local 500:

The Executive of the Local would like to start by thanking all of you across CAMH for your unwavering support and hard work on behalf of our clients during this challenging Pandemic time. The Local, OPSEU’s Executive Board and Mental Health & Addiction Division stand in solidarity with all members across the division in admiration and respect for all the incredible work you have done in the face of the worst pandemic many of us have known in our lifetimes. You are all the professionals who are the true heroes of this pandemic.

The Local recognizes that today’s E-Leader update on the Pandemic Pay from CAMH will be greeted with shock, anger and dismay for many members due to the exclusions that were highlighted around our members who will not be receiving pandemic pay. The final decision for which hospital workers are to receive Pandemic Pay was made by the Premier Doug Ford and Government of Ontario, not by CAMH or any individual hospital or health care organization.

The Local Executive and OPSEU as a whole are angered by the exclusion of any members of our Bargaining Unit. Since the Premier of the province announced payment the Pandemic Pay back in April, OPSEU, the Mental Health Division to which the Local belongs and the Local have been advocating for the Premier, the Minister of Health, the South West Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) and our own MPPs for all OPSEU members who have been client facing to receive Pandemic Pay.

I have been meeting with the employer almost daily since the state of emergency was declared back in March and have advocated for all of our members who have been client facing to receive Pandemic Pay for all hours worked. I have also reached out to the MPP for the riding I live in and have had email and verbal communications with her, and will continue to do so. Her name is Suze Morrison and she represents the NDP.

Below are a couple of articles from the OPSEU website about the advocacy that the larger Union has undertaken on behalf of all OPSEU members across the province.

OPSEU succeeds in expanding pandemic pay
Dear OPSEU member and healthcare worker: we continue to fight for pandemic pay

CAMH has been supportive of all employees who have been working on site to receive Pandemic Pay, working with the other teaching hospitals, (a group which CAMH is a part of) as well as the Ontario Hospital Association as hospitals around the province are joining forces to continue to fight this arbitrary decision by the government.

I want to reassure all of you that neither I, the Local or OPSEU will not give up the fight for each and every health care worker to receive Pandemic Pay at CAMH and further afield as well.

The Local has received many emails in the last 24 hours asking what has and what is being done so that every member receives Pandemic Pay and what you all as individuals can do. I would encourage all of you to please take the time to reach out to your Local MPP to advocate for the rights of yourself and all your colleagues to receive the Pandemic Pay. Listed below is the link that indicates all local MPPs for the ridings in the GTA. In your emails, please copy the Premier – Doug Ford and the Minister of Health – Christine Elliott as well.

https://www.ola.org/en/members/current

I would further encourage all of you whether or not you are receiving Pandemic Pay to reach out to your MPs at the federal Level as well. All monies that the province has been receiving have come from the Federal Government. I would encourage you to email your MP as well and include the Prime Minister – Justin Trudeau, the Minister of Finance – Bill Morneau and the Minister of Health – Patty Hadju.

https://www.ourcommons.ca/members/en/search?caucusId=all&province=ON&gender=all

In closing, I send you all my humblest and heartiest thanks for the work you have been doing and continue to do for our clients and each other for the last several months of this pandemic.

Thomas Andersson

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OPSEU Coalition of Racialized Workers: Virtual Pulse Check

During these unprecedented times, we see the world racing to find an answer to COVID-19. We’ve heard many advice on what we should do to protect ourselves and each other. And while there has been miss-steps and continued trial, we are all hopeful that we will turned the bend on this dreaded virus, and hope that we are doing everything in our power to prevent the predicted next wave.

And as we grieved the losses we faced due to COVID-19, we witnessed a most heinous crimes against another human being, caught on video. This horrific crime committed by officers who took an oath to serve and protect. The people we tell our children to turn to in times of need. How do we find comfort amidst all the turmoil?

The region 5 Coalition of Racialized Workers, would like to invite all OPSEU members to join us for a Zoom Pulse Check – Steps to healing. Join us on July 18, 2020 from 12:00 pm to 2:00 pm as we unpack.

Topic: Region 5 CoRW Meeting
Time: Saturday, July 18, 2020 12:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting” https://zoom.us/j/93819581866?pwd=WkQvSjhRd1VjQjh4UCsrUTU4cGpDZz09
Meeting ID: 938 1958 1866
Password: 347227

Download the flyer.

Agenda:
1. Check in
2. Healing for our communities: What we need to do to stay safe during COVID-19
3. Healing for Black people: Where do we start?

R5CoRW is offering care packages to members impacted by COVID-19. Contact R5CORW@gmail.com if you require assistance.

We are in it together and together we will win!

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Day of Mourning and Injured Workers

By Carol Mundley, RPN & Co-Chair Joint Occupational Health and Safety Committee, CAMH

Click here to print

On this day we recognize the many contributions of all workers. However, I stand here honouring the many essential workers who have given more than average. While some have paid the ultimate price, with their lives. Today, let’s not forget those who have been injured while “doing their jobs”!

No worker should have to worry about “will I be able to make it home the same way I came in to work”. It matters not what industry you work in, you have made a commitment to do the job you have been mandated to do. Many people will never have the choice of where they will work. You should not have to think, imagine or anticipate that having to fight for survival would be part of that contract. Furthermore, you will never find on said signed contract the words “you may not make it home because of death or injury” anywhere on it.

Workers are the foundation of every workplace. However, once you are injured at times you are made to feel as if it was your fault why you got injured in the first place.
You must complete a stock pile of paperwork for WSIB in order to begin your claim. This system is made to make you feel as if you are being penalized for putting forward a claim. It really makes one wonder if it is an attempt to frustrate you into not going through with the claim. The further anguish that is experienced leads to one developing increased anxiety, and if you didn’t suffer from anxiety before, you will certainly be diagnosed with some generalized anxiety after.

Is it a coincidence that you don’t usually have an email address for your assigned specialist? I think not! By the time your claim is completed you would have gone through no less than 3-4 case workers. The argument that is sometimes had between your GP/MD and WSIB, who at times sadly have the final say!

The same can be said if you did not get injured on the job and are lucky enough (or so it is thought) to have insurance through work. The challenges are similar to WSIB, but different, in that you don’t have as much paperwork.

On return to work, you would have been through no less than 4 calls to find out when you will be returning to work (all the time under the guise – “just calling to see how you are doing”). Having to jump through the virtual hoops a few times is an understatement to say the least.

The major challenge is the lack of a system approach to ensure you are appropriately
accommodated by your employer. Being lucky enough to have not only a lack of
thought, consideration, let’s not forget empathy. You may have a Manager who is
capable of being empathetic so your transition back to work is made a bit easier. Also,
not to forget if you are unionized and have a knowledgeable union representative with
you during this return to work process. For anyone returning it is not recommended and
recognized that a gradual return to work would be the best option, why is this not a
consideration, especially for those returning after being away for a long period of time.

Returning to your regular area of work, sadly, sometimes you are treated with
indifference and disdain even by your colleagues. What is neither thought of or
recognized, is that you are experiencing increased anxiety about returning to work. At
times you may have varying extremes. One might be, the individual may be avoided,
which leads to feeling of being isolated, and the other end of the spectrum where the
expectation is for the individual to return pre-injury functions. Another staff member
being expected to “pick up the extra task” for individuals on an accommodation leads to
animosity and hostility among staff.

Whether it is WSIB or not, Insurance Companies and organizations need to do a better
job at mitigating risk by ensuring systems are in place to protect workers, not just
physically, but psychologically. Working in unison will not only reduce the risk for
possible re-injury and loss of production but will facilitate that much needed support to
injured workers in transitioning safely after an injury.

We all play a part in ensuring that supporting an injured worker is essential to who we
are as a workforce!

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Disinfection of Filtering Facepiece Respirators

Considerations for healthcare organizations and occupational health professionals.

3M has been studying ways to sterilize or disinfect filtering facepiece respirators for years. There are at least four key aspects of successful disinfection of respirators, and most studies do not take all four into consideration.

Read the information provided by 3M…

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Disclosure of Medical Information – Employee and Employer Rights

This document was prepared by Bebe De Freitas, Human Rights Officer, Equity Unit, OPSEU, on May 2008.

Read the document here:

Disclosure of Medical Information – Employee and Employer Rights

 

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