Journal Pioneer

Minister offers Tignish assurances on Rapid Response changes

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY

A captain with the Tignish Fire Department says he is now looking forward to an enhanced Rapid Response system and the rollout of a mobile integrated health program. That’s following a meeting in Tignish Monday evening between Health P.E.I. officials and representa­tives from the fire department, Tignish Seniors Home and Tignish Town Council. “It was good, it was positive,” Stephen Trail described the hour and a half discussion.

Trail does, however, maintain a wait-and-see attitude concerning changes that will see the Rapid Response unit that operated 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday in West Prince expanded to 12 hours a day, seven days a week and covering all of Prince County.

“We’re not sold on it that it’s not a deteriorat­ion until they roll it out and we start to see how things are going to go forward,” he said. But, even on that, he has been offered some reassuranc­e as Health Minister Robert Mitchell committed to a followup discussion within three months of the program’s May roll-out. Mitchell, who had his deputy minister and Health P.E.I.’s director of emergency health and planning services in attendance with him for the meeting, suggested the meeting helped improve upon some of the informatio­n on the new programs. “We had a great discussion tonight and we’ve committed to having a great discussion as it moves out and further assess things from the community perspectiv­e as well as the health perspectiv­e,” said Mitchell. “The fire department in Tignish is a wonderful fire department and they need to be supported and we will continue to look for ways to do that.” Tignish-Palmer Road MLA Hal Perry said he was pleased with the dialogue. “I wanted some clarity: everybody sits in the same room, asks some questions, they get some answers from the people who are making the decisions. So, I’m coming away from this more comfortabl­e than I was going into this meeting.” Tignish Mayor Allan McInnis had a similar assessment, but he said he would be prepared to organize another meeting before the first three months of the program if it is determined the changes are detrimenta­l to his community and the organizati­ons and residents who rely on the Island EMS services.

The mayor said the Rapid Response Unit has been working out so well for his community that the Department of Health should be looking at duplicatin­g that success elsewhere.

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