Medicine Hat News

Docs say trust must be rebuilt after deal rejected

- DEAN BENNETT

The head of the Alberta Medical Associatio­n says many factors led to the recent collapse of a proposed master agreement with the province, but he says a key one was lack of trust.

Dr. Paul Boucher says before he and Health Minister Tyler Shandro can even begin negotiatin­g the nuts and bolts of a new deal, that trust must be regained.

“I’m not going to bring back another agreement (for ratificati­on) unless I have pretty good confidence that it’s going to pass,” Boucher said in an interview.

“Another failed ratificati­on would be a disaster for everyone as far as I’m concerned.”

Boucher said he and Shandro are meeting again, almost two weeks after the rank-and-file physicians of the 11,000-member AMA refused to ratify the new tentative deal brokered by both sides, voting 53 per cent against it.

Boucher said normally such deals pass with a strong majority. But during the voting process, he said he heard from about 3,000 physicians and many told him their core concern was that the pact left them too exposed to a government they didn’t trust.

“Any agreement really requires both parties to work well together within it,” said Boucher.

“I think a lot of members just weren’t sure that this was going to be the case. And there wasn’t enough clarity or safeguards to ensure that their voices were going to be heard and that they would be treated fairly within it.

“That’s a result of the challenges we’ve had (with the province) over the year.”

Those challenges began in early 2020, when Shandro unilateral­ly tore up the master agreement with the AMA, using a law passed months prior by the United Conservati­ve government.

That cancellati­on launched a year of bitter attacks from both sides. Shandro imposed fee changes that led to some doctors withdrawin­g services, particular­ly in rural locations, saying the changes were financiall­y unsustaina­ble.

Shandro’s officials dismissed the AMA as a lobby group and Shandro accused the organizati­on of spreading misinforma­tion to its members. The AMA, in turn, sued the government, accusing it of violating Charter rights on collective bargaining by, among other things, cancelling binding arbitratio­n.

All this was going on as COVID-19 swept through the province, filling up hospital wards.

Boucher said doctors were ready to sign a deal for less money, although they still had concerns and questions over remunerati­on. The four-year deal would have seen compensati­on stay static at more than $5 billion a year.

But he said a key concern was that binding arbitratio­n had been replaced by mediation, albeit with the mediation decision made public. In addition, the AMA lawsuit would be cancelled.

The AMA considers binding arbitratio­n critical, given it can’t hit the picket line for ethical reasons to otherwise gain leverage on intractabl­e labour disagreeme­nts.

“(Arbitratio­n) guarantees you a process. It does not guarantee you a result on either end, but I think a lot of docs just wanted that sense of fairness,” said Boucher.

“And I would have loved to have given it to them. We just couldn’t get that this go round.”

He said Shandro and the government have pivoted from the former approach and have been working collaborat­ively with the AMA, particular­ly on the recent COVID-19 vaccine rollout.

Shandro has cancelled many of the fee changes he imposed and promised contentiou­s ones won’t ever return.

After the vote failed on March 30, Shandro stated, “Our government will seek to further renew our relationsh­ip with the AMA in the weeks and months to come as we work together to ensure Albertans continue to benefit from quality health care.”

Boucher agreed: “We just need to rebuild the relationsh­ip.”

He said there is no timeline for a new deal. “I think it’s going to be some time.”

 ??  ?? Tyler Shandro
Tyler Shandro

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