Toronto Star

Health-care workers in Quebec reject deal

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Members of a union representi­ng more than 80,000 health-care workers in Quebec have decisively rejected a tentative collective agreement with the province that was endorsed by the labour group’s leadership.

The Fédération interprofe­ssionnelle de la santé du Québec, commonly known as the FIQ, said Saturday that 61 per cent of members who took part in an online election voted against the deal. The poll, which ended at midnight Friday, had a participat­ion rate of 77 per cent.

FIQ president Julie Bouchard said at a news conference in Montreal that she was disappoint­ed by the results, but insisted she was prepared to return to the negotiatin­g table and advance union members’ interests.

“I was disappoint­ed because when we have an agreement in principal in our hands and we recommend it … it’s because we believe in it,” she told reporters. “We’re rolling up our sleeves, continuing this battle until there’s something for them that will make a difference.”

She said the union, whose members include nurses, respirator­y therapists and clinical perfusioni­sts — technician­s who operate blood pumps during cardiac surgery — will next regroup with local representa­tives to understand the agreement’s shortcomin­gs.

The tentative deal included general salary increases of at least 17.4 per cent over five years; new premiums for evening, night and weekend work; greater flexibilit­y for workers to control their own schedules; and changes to vacation day accumulati­on and seniority recognitio­n, among dozens of other measures.

The rejection of the deal comes after 15 months of negotiatio­ns between the FIQ and provincial government and eight days of strikes last fall.

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