Ottawa Citizen

Workers warn lives will be at risk if Public Health Ontario labs close

- LIAM CASEY

The potential closure of six laboratori­es across the province would be dangerous and create inequity in northern Ontario, Public Health Ontario workers said Wednesday.

The workers are also worried about the proposal to get rid of the water testing program for private well owners across Ontario.

Last fall, the auditor general once again recommende­d the agency close six of its public health laboratori­es and eliminate the water testing program in an effort to cut costs.

Public Health Ontario first proposed the consolidat­ion of its 11 laboratori­es in 2017, but the government has not acted.

Casey Mcguire, a lab worker with Public Health Ontario, brought a petition to Queen's Park with more than 9,000 signatures of her colleagues and citizens concerned about the potential closures.

“Closing these public health labs will put communitie­s at risk,” she said. “The mission of Public Health Ontario is to enable informed decisions, get actions to protect and promote health and contribute to reducing health inequities.”

Mcguire and the union that represents the agency's lab workers, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, are asking the government to reconsider the recommende­d closures.

“Closing Public Health Ontario labs would be a public disaster and lives will be at risk to meet demand and keep our community safe,” Mcguire said.

Labs in Timmins, Sault Ste. Marie, Orillia, Hamilton, Kingston and Peterborou­gh are on the chopping block, which could mean the loss of 82 jobs, said the union's president, J.P. Hornick.

“If the last few years have taught us anything, it is that public health should never be taken for granted,” Hornick said. “Like many choices made by this government, if Premier (Doug) Ford decides to shutter the doors of these six labs, over half of the Public Health Ontario labs, it will be short sighted and dangerous. He is creating a crisis where there is none.”

Health Minister Sylvia Jones said the province had not made a decision on the future of the well-water testing program, but refused to say whether or not it would close any labs.

“Let me be as clear as I can possibly be: There is no one in the province of Ontario or in this legislatur­e who believes that putting well-water testing at risk is on the table,” Jones said during question period.

She said the ministry “has not made any decisions about changes to the provincial well-water testing program, including which laboratori­es conduct testing of water samples.”

Jones, who said there were thousands of private wells across the province, stressed the tests remain available and that no changes had been made.

Last year, the Office of the Auditor General of Ontario conducted a value-for-money audit of Public Health Ontario, a government agency that is accountabl­e to the health minister.

In 2017, Public Health Ontario along with the ministry proposed a modernizat­ion plan for the agency that included the consolidat­ion of labs, a reduction in the type of tests conducted and gradually doing away with private water testing.

“According to the agency, this plan was needed to mitigate rising costs of repairs and upgrades in existing laboratory sites, and would result in a more efficient operating model,” the auditor general's report noted.

It said some of the labs rerouted the vast majority of test samples to other labs for testing.

In 2023, the agency presented an updated modernizat­ion plan to the ministry with the same consolidat­ion plan along with the eliminatio­n of the water testing program, the auditor general said.

The auditor general recommende­d in December that Public Health Ontario work with the ministry to update and implement a plan within a year “to streamline public health laboratory operations.”

The agency accepted the recommenda­tion.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Health Minister Sylvia Jones refused to say whether or not the province would close any public health labs.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Health Minister Sylvia Jones refused to say whether or not the province would close any public health labs.

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