-

Cole Harbour Long Term Care Workers Vote to Strike

Cole Harbour, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Long term care workers at Bisset Court, represented by CUPE 4970, have voted in favour of a strike mandate this week, with 100% of votes in favour of job action. This echoes calls from other workers in the sector for fair wages and improved recruitment and retention to reduce understaffing issues.

“We work short so often that it’s more of a surprise to come in and find a full roster,” commented CUPE 4970 President Trina Walker. “Every day, we’re forced to make calls that prioritize only the bare necessities rather than providing the attention and care we want to offer our residents. We need that to change.”

Understaffing and working short is a prevalent issue in the long-term care sector, with just over 50% of Nova Scotian long term care homes meeting the bare minimum recommended 4.1 hours of care per day per resident. This recommendation is not mandatory, so long term care homes can, and do, fall below this number when staff are short due to lack of retention or illness.

“People keep saying that no one wants to work anymore. That’s not true. No one wants to work full time with mandatory over time, and still not be able to afford their basic necessities like rent, food, or a vehicle,” continued Walker. “I love my job; I think I genuinely help people each and every day, but that doesn’t mean I don’t deserve to be paid fairly for my work.”

“Workers across the province, across the country, are reaching their breaking points. The cost of everything has gone up dramatically in recent years, making the cost-of-living skyrocket, and wages just haven’t kept up. This isn’t a long-term care specific issue. This government needs to recognize that a healthy province is created by people being able to afford to live there,” said Tammy Martin, CUPE Long Term Care Coordinator, “and we hope our fellow workers, regardless of sector, will support our fight for just that.”

:so/cope-491

:bw/cope-491

Contacts

For more information, please contact:

Trina Walker
CUPE 4970 President
902-877-8449

Tammy Martin
CUPE Long Term Care Coordinator
902-577-2463

Taylor Johnston
CUPE Atlantic Communications Representative
tjohnston@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information, please contact:

Trina Walker
CUPE 4970 President
902-877-8449

Tammy Martin
CUPE Long Term Care Coordinator
902-577-2463

Taylor Johnston
CUPE Atlantic Communications Representative
tjohnston@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

CUPE Ontario urges government to change course ahead of 2026 budget

NIAGARA FALLS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE Ontario president Fred Hahn called on the Ford government to reverse course on its budget priorities Thursday, warning that years of underfunding public services have deepened inequality and harmed workers and communities across the province. Hahn spoke at a press conference and later before the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs as part of the 2026 pre-budget consultations. With more than 300,000 members, CUPE Ontario is the largest union in...

Paramedics need a real solution to growing workforce crisis, not additional red tape through a college: CUPE Ambulance Committee of Ontario

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Ontario’s paramedic system is under severe strain as services struggle to recruit and retain workers while frontline paramedics face mounting mental health pressures. Yet some influential voices are once again promoting the creation of a College of Paramedics, an expensive and unnecessary layer of regulation that would do nothing to improve patient care. “Ontario’s paramedic workforce is in the midst of a crisis driven by chronic understaffing, burnout, and a growing v...

Workers from Melville Lodge Vote to Strike

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Halifax-based long term care workers from Melville Lodge, represented by CUPE 3840, vote 100% in a favour of a strike mandate last week, citing wages and retention issues as their main concerns. “Long term care is in crisis. We all know that, even the government does, and many of those issues come down to insufficient staffing levels. Long wait times? Insufficient care? Lack of attention? If we had sufficient staff, the beds the government is creating would have pe...
Back to Newsroom