-

Nova Scotia Child Care Workers Not Provided With the Necessary Protection From Omicron

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nova Scotia early childhood educators, represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, are calling on the Houston government to increase safety measures, including PPE, for child care workers as case counts of the omicron variant of COVID-19 continue to rise.

“Child care workers are being put in a very difficult position by this government,” says Nan McFadgen, President of CUPE Nova Scotia. “They are working with young children who cannot be vaccinated yet. With staffing levels in our child care centres already at critical levels, we need to do everything we can to protect these workers and the children in their care.”

As the omicron variant continues to spread across Canada, the country’s top doctors have recognized the airborne spread of the virus and called for the increase in usage of respirator type masks such as N95s, to effectively protect against transmission of the virus. Currently child care workers in Nova Scotia are not being provided with this type of protection.

“When you work with young children you are up close and personal for eight hours a day, it is not a job you can do with social distancing,” says Naomi Stewart, CUPE child care coordinator in Nova Scotia. “Many of these classrooms do not have open windows or the proper ventilation to help reduce airborne transmission.”

The province recently announced that they would close public schools in response to the increase in transmission throughout the school system. This has resulted in increased usage of child care centres for after school services.

“With many other services, including schools, being closed, child care workers are heroically battling on the front lines of the pandemic,” says Margot Nickerson, President of CUPE Local 4745, which represents early childhood educators at several child care centres in the provnce. “Premier Houston is not providing these workers with the level of protection that our public health officials are calling for. Something needs to be done.”

CUPE represents over 200 early childhood educators at not-for-profit and profit child care centres across Nova Scotia.

:cc/cope491

Contacts

Matthew Stella
CUPE Communications
613-252-4377
mstella@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Matthew Stella
CUPE Communications
613-252-4377
mstella@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

Glen Haven Manor joins strike

NEW GLASGOW, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Long term care workers at Glen Haven Manor, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) local 2330, are expected to hit picket lines at 7AM on May 27, bringing the total number of striking workers to approximately 3,600. They will be picketing at Glen Haven Manor, 739 E River Rd, New Glasgow. “For 7 weeks, these workers have been providing essential care for 8, 12 hours a day, and then marching in picket lines because they believe in what we’re fig...

WCB Workers Sound Alarm on Rising Workloads and Delays in Care for Injured Canadians

VANCOUVER, BC--(BUSINESS WIRE)--When Canadians are injured on the job, they depend on the expertise and dedication of workers at the Workers’ Compensation Boards (WCBs) across the country. But as workloads intensify and staffing pressures mount, those same workers are warning that delays in care are becoming unavoidable. That message was front and centre at a national conference of WCB unions held this week, bringing together delegates from the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), the Nat...

Striking workers to rally outside state of the province address by Premier Houston

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Striking long term care workers from across Nova Scotia will be collapsing picket lines and converging outside of Premier Tim Houston’s state of the province address today. All Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) members in Nova Scotia, community and political allies, as well as labour leaders will be speaking to the ‘state of long term care’ at a rally this afternoon. "It’s time our elected representatives listened to their constituents. We’re not just worke...
Back to Newsroom