The Standard (St. Catharines)

Some jail guards in Ontario are refusing to work without protective gear, union says //

Associatio­n defends pharmacy owners’ right to take precaution­s

- JULIAN MCKENZIE

MONTREAL—Premier François Legault hails Quebec healthcare workers as “guardian angels,” but some say they are being denied services at banks and pharmacies when they reveal their occupation­s.

Olijah Springer, a nursing assistant and technician at the Montreal General Hospital, voiced his displeasur­e on Facebook last week after he was told he couldn’t shop at a Pharmaprix in the Montreal borough of LaSalle.

“It didn’t feel good,” Springer said in a subsequent interview. “I don’t know how to better describe it.”

Springer was asked by a clerk when he entered the store if he had any symptoms, or if he had been exposed to anyone with symptoms of COVID-19. He said no, but explained he worked in a hospital. He says he was then told that someone would shop for him.

“At this point, I saw people that I knew from the area and they’re like ‘What’s going on? Why are you standing on the side?’” he said. “Well, apparently I can’t be a public servant and shop at the same time.”

The pharmacy referred questions to parent company Loblaw, which said in a statement that such measures have been adopted by up to a quarter of Quebec pharmacist­s and “are not corporatel­y directed.”

Bertrand Bolduc, president of Quebec’s order of pharmacist­s, said all pharmacies across the province have strict hygiene measures in place to limit the spread of COVID-19. About a quarter of them have gone even further and operate under “closed-door” conditions.

Those pharmacies are closed to the public, he said. Employees will do the shopping for customers and make home deliveries or hand off products to clients in the parking lot.

As for the businesses that refuse to let certain health workers into the stores, Bolduc said it’s the pharmacy owner’s decision to make.

“There isn’t anyone in Quebec who is being deprived of the services of a pharmacy,” Bolduc said in an interview Wednesday. “And each owner is doing what they feel is right for their pharmacy.”

Springer says he was “frustrated”

and eventually left the store without making any purchases. He also says he endured a similar experience at a bank, when his financial adviser explained they would be limiting contact with health-care workers.

Denyse Joseph, vice-president of the provincial nurses union, says she has heard similar stories of nurses being denied service from two other businesses. She says she has yet to hear of any formal complaints.

“It’s not because you’re a health-care profession­al that you’ll automatica­lly contaminat­e people around you,” Joseph said.

“We know what precaution­s we have to take. They’re very, very cautious about the precaution not to contaminat­e either other health-care profession­als ... patients and families,” she said of the province’s nurses. “I think we have to trust their judgment.”

The shunning of nurses flies in the face of the premier’s regular praise of health-care workers as saviours. “You are our guardian angels. We’re counting on you,” Legault said March 13. “You are doing an extraordin­ary job, and I want to tell you we’re ready to support you in any way possible.”

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The vice-president of the provincial nurses union in Quebec says she has heard stories of nurses being denied service.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS The vice-president of the provincial nurses union in Quebec says she has heard stories of nurses being denied service.

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