-

“We Have No Choice but to Work Ourselves to Death”: SickKids Staff Will Rally for a Decent Pension Plan on Tuesday

Union blasts hospital for taking 24-year pension holiday

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--After 36 years of backbreaking labour at SickKids Hospital, patient service aid Leonora Foster has one goal before ending her career: to secure a decent pension plan for herself and her co-workers to escape the clutches of poverty in her sunset years.

The staff at the hospital in downtown Toronto are predominantly women and many are racialized. Foster says they are stricken that despite their decades of selfless support to sick children, the hospital has a pension plan that fails its workforce.

“SickKids staff are retiring into poverty. In fact, there are workers who are delaying retirement into their late 60s and 70s because they can’t afford to stop working,” says Foster. “We work ourselves to death because we cannot afford to retire. How is that right or fair?”

On Tuesday, Foster will be leading a rally outside SickKids demanding her employer sign onto the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP). SickKids and St. Mary’s General Hospital are the only two hospitals in Ontario that are not part of HOOPP, although the latter recently committed to joining the pension plan.

According to the union, HOOPP is far superior to the SickKids pension plan. A worker earning $45,000 at the end of their career with 30 years of service can expect to receive annual payments of $25,560 through HOOPP, $10,000 more than the SickKids pension plan provides.

“This hospital has built a reputation as a world-class institution on the strength of the contribution of these women. SickKids must ensure its staff have a secure retirement,” says Michael Hurley, President of the Ontario Council of Hospital Unions, which represents about 50,000 CUPE hospital workers including the members of CUPE 2816.

“Other hospitals in Ontario can manage it and SickKids can too. Sick Kids cannot continue to exploit a workforce that cares so much and so well for sick children,” Hurley says.

SickKids’ pension plan is inferior partly because the hospital has been on a pension holiday since 1997 except for a two-year period between March 2020 until December 2022, according to CUPE.

Foster says SickKids staff will send a strong message to management at the upcoming rally and a mobilizing campaign over the next few months, until the hospital takes this issue seriously.

Who:

SickKids staff led by Leonora Foster, president of CUPE 2816;

 

Tina Henderson, president of OPSEU 5114;

Michael Hurley, president of CUPE’s Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU-CUPE).

What:

Rally for a fair pension plan by SickKids workers.

When:

11:30 a.m. on Tuesday, June 25.

Where:

SickKids Hospital, 555 University Ave, Toronto.

About CUPE 2816

CUPE 2816 represents about 750 workers at the hospital including patient service aides, housekeepers, food service workers, building operators, electricians, plumbers, carpenters, painters, mechanics, and others.

lf/cope491

Contacts

For more information contact:
Zaid Noorsumar CUPE Communications 647-995-9859 znoorsumar@cupe.ca

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information contact:
Zaid Noorsumar CUPE Communications 647-995-9859 znoorsumar@cupe.ca

More News From CUPE

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