Montreal Gazette

Quebec paramedics threaten strike action

Union promises no service interrupti­ons

- CHARLIE FIDELMAN GAZETTE HEALTH REPORTER cfidelman@ montrealga­zette.com Twitter: @ Health Issues

Quebec paramedics are ramping up pressure tactics and threatenin­g a general unlimited strike as of Christmas Eve unless negotiatio­ns resume with the provincial government.

But as 2,500 paramedics — 800 in the Montreal and Laval area — prepare for strike action, union leaders promise no service interrupti­ons to patients.

The union has already approved a list of essential services that will be maintained, Réjean Leclerc, a member of the Confédérat­ion des syndicats nationaux (CSN) negotiatin­g team, said during a news conference Tuesday.

The Fédération de la santé et des services sociaux (FSSS-CSN) union met with Quebec’s essential services council after 71 per cent of paramedics rejected a tentative deal last July, giving the union a mandate to strike.

The impact of a strike would be felt at the administra­tive level, Leclerc said, as paramedics stage public awareness campaigns.

Paramedics are already applying administra­tive pressure tactics, such as refusing to take students aboard ambulances for training purposes, or refusing to take patient escorts (family members, friends) along during the patients’ ride to hospitals. Workers are using green ink to write their reports, which makes scanning difficult.

The paramedic’s previous contract expired in March 2010.

The main areas of dispute are over the pension plans and pay equity within its ranks for 16 pay levels that the union would like to see reduced.

“We do the same work on the road,” said union representa­tive and paramedic Yvon Bonesso. “Same work, same pay.”

Montrealer­s might even notice a slight improvemen­t in service, with more employees on the road as paramedics adopt a work-to-rule attitude and staff shifts at 100 per cent, Bonesso said.

“It’s going to cost the employer more.”

Paramedics earn between $17 and $30 an hour, depending on training and experience.

Quebec Health Minister Réjean Hébert said he is ready to resume negotiatio­ns but given limited resources, the margin to manoeuvre is limited.

 ?? PIERRE OBENDRAUF/ GAZETTE FILES ?? Paramedics are already applying administra­tive pressure tactics, such as refusing to take patient escorts, including family members and friends, along during patients’ ride to hospitals.
PIERRE OBENDRAUF/ GAZETTE FILES Paramedics are already applying administra­tive pressure tactics, such as refusing to take patient escorts, including family members and friends, along during patients’ ride to hospitals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada