-

Hospital Staff and Paramedics to Reveal Number of Staff Needed Just to Maintain Service Levels at Toronto Hospitals: Media Conference Tuesday, Scarborough Hospital (ER)

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In Ontario hospital staff turnover rates have doubled and paramedics are struggling due to rapid increase in call volumes. Toronto hospital staff and area paramedics are warning that the depth of the hospital staffing crisis will worsen and that patient access to care is in peril under the provincial government’s current course, which includes the elimination of more than $1.6 Billion in special COVID-19 funding.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) will hold a media conference on Tuesday, September 27, 2022, at 12 noon at the Scarborough General Hospital - Emergency Department entrance - to release Toronto-specific data on how many nurses, paramedical, clerical and support staff would need to be hired this year by hospitals in the area, just to maintain existing patient care and service levels.

Hospital emergency room (ER) and other unit closures, and staffing shortages will “only intensify” under the current health human resource strategy of the PC provincial government, says Dave Verch, a registered practical nurse (RPN) and first vice-president of CUPE’s Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU-CUPE).

Officially the hospital staff turnover rate in Ontario is 14.95%. “This is an unsustainable level of loss of experienced health care workers,” says Verch. “None of this is normal nor is it acceptable. With an ageing and growing population here in Toronto, the provincial government is on a course to cause untold suffering for patients and front-line hospital staff.”

The hospital staffing crisis is contributing to ambulance unavailability, as offload delays for paramedics prevents timely response to 911 calls. The problem is compounded by understaffing of paramedic services relative to demand. This is particularly pronounced in Toronto, where call volumes have increased by an average of 4.5% over the last decade.

"Toronto's paramedics have stepped up admirably to continue serving our city while being forced to do more with less, often risking injury and burnout. But even as paramedics are missing breaks and consistently working overtime to provide the best service possible, there are often critical ambulance shortages in Toronto as in other parts of the province. Our system is crumbling and it’s high time for the Ontario provincial government to work on a staffing strategy that ensures safe staffing levels and a high-quality paramedic service," says Mike Merriman, CUPE 416 -Toronto Paramedic Services - Unit Chair.

At Tuesday’s media conference, Verch and Merriman will be joined by staff working at the Scarborough General Hospital (3050 Lawrence Ave., East) and paramedics from Toronto and other communities across Ontario.

In Ontario, CUPE represents 50,000 front-line hospital staff including RPNs, personal support workers, cleaners, porters, paramedical and administrative and other workers and more than 6000 paramedics and dispatchers. CUPE represents about 1200 paramedics working for the City of Toronto

SY:lf/cope491

Contacts

Stella Yeadon CUPE Communications 416-559-9300 syeadon@cupe.ca
Zaid Noorsumar CUPE Communications 647-995-9859 znoorsumar@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Stella Yeadon CUPE Communications 416-559-9300 syeadon@cupe.ca
Zaid Noorsumar CUPE Communications 647-995-9859 znoorsumar@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

CUPE Ontario and Ontario NDP Challenge Conservatives’ Claims on Bill 60 and Water Privatization With Damning Legal Opinion

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ford Conservatives’ plan to privatize Ontario’s water was conclusively exposed today as leaders from CUPE Ontario and the Ontario NDP were joined by a lawyer from Goldblatt Partners LLP to release a legal opinion that reveals the true intent of Bill 60, the Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025. CUPE Ontario commissioned a legal review of Schedule 16 of Bill 60 as part of the union’s fight against the Ford government’s plans to privatize publicly owned regiona...

CUPE’s largest Nova Scotian Nursing Home Local Votes to Strike

SYDNEY, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Workers from Harbourstone Enhanced Care, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 1183, have voted 87% in favour of a strike mandate, making them the 39th CUPE long term care home to take this action. “As long-term care workers, we don’t do this job for the money or the praise, certainly not the notoriety—we do it because we genuinely care about the residents in these homes, about their families, and we want to do our part in making their lives...

Media Advisory - NSCAD Rally

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Striking Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) workers and their allies are rallying tomorrow, March 13, at 11:00 AM outside NSCAD’s Fountain Campus at Granville Mall in Halifax. Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 3912 NSCAD Vice President Lachlan Sheldrick and CUPE 3912 President Lauren McKenzie will be available for interviews, along with striking workers, alumni, current undergraduate students, labour movement leaders, and other community su...
Back to Newsroom