Dept of Community Services set bargaining dates
Department of Community Services Locals are set to negotiate provincially this upcoming September 4th and 5th in Pugwash, NS!
SOLIDARITY!
Minister Delorey Announces CCA Bursary Program
Sister Louise Riley – Chair of the Long Term Care Coordinating Committee, and CUPE NS President – Nan McFadgen attended a panel discussion today in Annapolis Valley where Minister Randy Delorey made an announcement at the Kingstec Nova Scotia Community College about government investing $460,000 into the launch of a bursary program for individuals taking the CCA Program. Delorey says there will be 115 bursaries worth $4000 each, which will cover tuition and books to cover the program for students attending NSCC or Université Sainte Anne.
Delorey stated “Our hope is that this financial assistance will remove the barriers for some students waiting to enter the field, and encourage more to enrol – and interim, as I’ve mentioned earlier, help address staffing challenges across the workforce”
CUPE pushes for solutions to the staffing crisis
We have sent the following letter to Mark Furey, the Minister of Justice, and Randy Delorey, the Minister of Health and Wellness:
Louise Riley speaks to Todd Veinotte
Louise Riley, chair of CUPE’s LTC Coordinating Committee spoke with Todd Veinotte on 95.7 FM at 9 a.m. today. They talked about the value of CCAs, solutions to the LTC crisis, bursaries, wages, recruitment, and mandating.
Listen to the 9 AM June 2 interview here: https://www.news957.com/audio/the-todd-veinotte-show
(start at the 11:50-minute mark)
Louise Riley and Nan McFadgen in the ChronicleHerald
In a letter published in the ChronicleHerald, Louise Riley and Nan McFadgen call for steps to address the staffing shortage in long-term care.
Rebuild long-term care in Nova Scotia
CUPE Nova Scotia is calling on the McNeil government to immediately increase funding to all publicly-funded long-term care facilities, so they reach a minimum staff funding of 4.1 hours of care per resident each day.
“Many of our members are telling us that, on average, they have less than ten minutes to get each resident ready for the day,” says Louise Riley, chair of the CUPE NS Long Term Care Coordinating Committee. “Let that sink in. Ten minutes or less. How many able-bodied adults do you know that can get themselves ready for the day in that amount of time?”