The Niagara Falls Review

Doug Ford says management-level jobs will be lost in the merger of 20 health agencies, changing his messaging to no front-line workers will be cut

Opposition disputes claims about front-line workers

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

CAMBRIDGE, ONT. — Management-level jobs will be lost in the planned merger of 20 provincial health agencies, Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday, as his message shifted from no job losses under his government to no front-line job losses.

Front-line jobs will be protected, Ford said, as the province consolidat­es 14 local health integratio­n networks, Cancer Care Ontario, eHealth Ontario and several other agencies into a new organizati­on called Ontario Health.

“You know who’s going to lose their jobs, unfortunat­ely, are the people in the LHINs — the CEOs that are making hundreds of thousands of dollars, the big silos they have there, the big executives, presidents and vice-presidents making outrageous amounts of money,” Ford said.

“We’re going to take that money and put it to the front lines.”

When Health Minister Christine Elliott announced the health system transforma­tion last month, background materials portrayed some management and administra­tive work at the agencies as “duplicativ­e,” which Elliott said referred to administra­tive functions.

But she wouldn’t say if there would be job losses.

During last year’s election campaign, Ford often promised that under his government not a single job would be lost, as he looks for ways to trim a multibilli­ondollar deficit. But in recent weeks his government and ministers have amended that promise, adding the phrase “frontline.”

“So far, we’ve made these efficienci­es and not one person has lost their job,” Ford said Wednesday.

Ontario’s ombudsman has said that some workers in the provincial Child and Youth Advocate’s office will lose their jobs when his office assumes its duties this spring.

The Toronto Catholic District School Board has also said the province’s decision to cut programs aimed at providing students with extra skills and support would result in the loss of about 35 parttime student tutors and 60 working in youth after-hour programs.

KidsAbilit­y, an autism service provider in Waterloo Region, said it is laying off eight therapists and one social worker as a result of the government’s changes to how it funds autism therapy. Regional service providers will no longer be directly funded by the government, rather, families will be given money directly to spend in a variety of possible ways.

NDP deputy leader Sara Singh said she expects deep cuts in the government’s first budget, to be tabled next month.

“He says only managers will lose their jobs, but that’s already untrue, and the cuts have only just begun,” she said in a statement.

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