-

Home Support workers say enough is enough, vote to go on strike

SYDNEY, Nova Scotia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The home support workers of New Waterford Homecare Service Society voted overwhelmingly in favour of job action, with 99% of the workers voting in favour of a strike mandate. This vote comes after nearly two years of bargaining and four years with an expired contract.

Home Support Workers Say Enough is Enough, Vote to go on Strike

Share

“The entire time Premier Houston has been in office, we’ve been out of contract, and we’re left wondering, when he promises to fix health care, is he just not including Home Support?” said Jenn Smith, President of CUPE 3986, which represents the home support workers of New Waterford Homecare Service Society.

Home support workers, made up largely of Continuing Care Assistants (CCAs), are responsible for taking care of seniors and those with medical conditions that must be monitored. These workers allow hospitals to send patients home sooner and keep seniors in their homes longer, easing the burden on long term care, which is already suffering from bed shortages. Yet, the Houston government has offered very little to acknowledge their vital role in the health care system.

“We don’t even have guaranteed hours,” continued Smith. “Some days, we’re scheduled for eight hours of visits but if someone cancels, we’re left in the lurch. It’s impossible to financially plan or budget if you don’t know how many hours you’ll actually end up being paid for.”

CUPE 3986, alongside the other CUPE home support locals, are asking for ‘guaranteed hours’ which would mean the employer is required to schedule eight hours of appointments within a ten-hour block, allowing these vital workers to have both a consistent income and schedule.

“This isn’t a new concept. Many of the home support employers in Nova Scotia already offer guaranteed hours,” said CUPE Home Support Coordinator Kathy MacLeod. “And yet government is refusing to give us the same. Even after so many months of bargaining, we’re still fighting for so many vital parts of a fair collective agreement.”

Upon filing for conciliation and taking a strike vote, priority items such as wages, guaranteed hours, improved language around required travel, and weekend premiums still remain on the table.

“How can Houston claim he’s working to fix health care when he’s had three years to help CCAs in Home Support and has chosen to ignore them instead?” asked Smith.

:so/cope491

Contacts

Jenn Smith
CUPE 3986 President
(902) 202-2991

Kathy MacLeod
CUPE Home Support Coordinator
(902) 578-3304

Taylor Johnston
CUPE Atlantic
Communications
tjohnston@cupe.ca

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

Jenn Smith
CUPE 3986 President
(902) 202-2991

Kathy MacLeod
CUPE Home Support Coordinator
(902) 578-3304

Taylor Johnston
CUPE Atlantic
Communications
tjohnston@cupe.ca

More News From CUPE

CUPE: Canada's Flight Attendants Push Parties to Pledge End of Unpaid Work If Elected

OTTAWA, Ontario--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE's Airline Division, representing 18,500 flight attendants across Canada, is making its federal election pitch, calling on parties to pledge now that they will introduce legislation to ban unpaid work in the airline sector if elected. Party leaders have been invited to sign the union's pledge to end unpaid work for flight attendants, by reintroducing Bill C-415 - originally introduced by NDP MP Bonita Zarrillo - in the next Parliament. The bill would ensure...

Raj Uppal elected President of CUPE Alberta

EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Health care worker Raj Uppal has been elected President of CUPE Alberta. The forty- one-year-old mother of two was selected on Friday as the new leader of the 40,000-member strong organization, defeating incumbent Rory Gill. Uppal appears to be the first woman of colour to lead a major union in Alberta. Uppal has been the President of CUPE 41 for six years, representing 1,400 members at Grey Nuns and Edmonton General Hospitals. During her time as Local Presid...

Nova Scotia School Support Staff Vote to Ratify Tentative Agreement

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--School support staff across Nova Scotia have voted to accept their tentative agreements, averting potential province-wide job action. The eight CUPE locals coordinated negotiations of their different collective agreements, and their unity and solidarity throughout almost a year of bargaining secured important gains for workers in this sector. “Our approach to bargaining was ‘all of us or none of us’,” said Nelson Scott, Chair of the Nova Scotia School Boar...
Back to Newsroom