-

Hospital workers to stage anti-privatization demonstration outside MPP Michael Ford’s constituency office on Wednesday in response to government expansion of private, for-profit healthcare services

Ford government to double private delivery of MRIs and CT scans

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In response to the Ford government’s plans to double private delivery of MRIs and CT scans, hospital workers will be protesting at Ontario PC MPP Michael Ford’s constituency office in Toronto on Wednesday morning.

“The Ford government says the status quo isn’t working – but it’s a status quo of their own making,” said Michael Hurley, President of CUPE’s Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU/CUPE). “They have been underfunding and starving the public system and dangling privatization as a solution. But privatization is twice as expensive and comes with longer waiting lists. We are calling for real solutions to the hospital crisis, like concrete measures to attract and retain new staff and the addition of new beds.”

The union pointed out a recent Ontario Health Coalition report that found private clinics are illegally billing patients up to $8,000 for medically necessary services in violation of the Canada Health Act.

“Premier Ford famously claimed that Ontarians would never have to pay with their credit card, only their OHIP card. However, patients at for-profit clinics are being charged thousands of dollars,” said Sharon Richer, Secretary-Treasurer of OCHU/CUPE. “People have been told they can either pay for medically needed surgeries or face extreme wait times.”

The rally in Toronto is part of a series of demonstrations the union is organizing across communities in Ontario, as private clinics receive record funding while public hospitals operate deficits.

Who:

 

Mark Hancock, CUPE National President

 

 

Candace Rennick, CUPE National Secretary-Treasurer

 

 

Michael Hurley, President of OCHU/CUPE

 

 

Sharon Richer, Secretary-Treasurer of OCHU/CUPE

 

 

 

What:

 

Hospital workers rally at Ontario PC MPP Michael Ford’s constituency office

 

 

 

When:

 

11:30 a.m., Wednesday, July 10th

 

 

 

Where:

 

1832 Weston Rd. Toronto, ON M9N 1V8

RM:cj/cope491

Contacts

For more information:

Robert Murdoch
CUPE Communications
rmurdoch@cupe.ca
416-434-3690

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information:

Robert Murdoch
CUPE Communications
rmurdoch@cupe.ca
416-434-3690

More News From CUPE

CUPE: Airline industry appears to be flying the plane on federal government’s unpaid work probe

OTTAWA, ON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE’s Airline Division, the union representing 20,000 flight attendants across Canada, is raising concerns about the impartiality and legitimacy of the federal government’s probe into unpaid work in the airline sector, as it enters its second phase. “The parameters of this process have been noticeably tilted towards the industry position,” said Wesley Lesosky, President of the Airline Division of CUPE. “The government has done very little to avoid the impression th...

Workers with Disabilities to Assess Ford Conservatives’ Progress on Accessibility

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--At a media conference tomorrow, workers with disabilities will join representatives of CUPE Ontario and the Ontario NDP critic for accessibility to offer their assessment of the Ford government’s record on the implementation of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005. The AODA was intended to ensure, over a 20-year timeline, that public spaces and buildings were accessible to people with disabilities. But last year’s deadline came and went with no a...

Workers with Disabilities to Assess Ford Conservatives’ Progress on Accessibility

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--At a media conference tomorrow, workers with disabilities will join representatives of CUPE Ontario and the Ontario NDP critic for accessibility to offer their assessment of the Ford government’s record on the implementation of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005. The AODA was intended to ensure, over a 20-year timeline, that public spaces and buildings were accessible to people with disabilities. But last year’s deadline came and went with no a...
Back to Newsroom