Members of a Quebec union representing 80,000 health-care workers say the latest government offers are insufficient, and the union is calling on its members to refuse overtime beginning Sept. 19. Quebec health-care workers and members from the Quebec’s nurses union (FIQ) demonstrate to demand a new contract negotiation in Montreal, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi
MONTREAL – A Quebec union representing 80,000 health-care workers has dismissed the province’s latest contract offer and called on its members to refuse to work overtime beginning Sept. 19.
Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec, known as the FIQ, is the only major union without a contract after the large-scale labour conflict last year that closed hundreds of schools for weeks and delayed surgeries.
The FIQ represents most of the province’s nurses, and also respiratory therapists and clinical perfusionists – technicians who operate blood pumps during cardiac surgery.
Its threat risks causing major disruption across the health-care network, where employees are routinely asked to work overtime because of widespread labour shortages, particularly for nurses.
The union says the government’s latest offer, made this week, is nothing more than “smoke and mirrors.”
Negotiations are stuck around the government’s demand that nurses, on a voluntary basis, be free to move from one health-care facility to another to address needs in the system where they arise.
But the FIQ says the measure would disregard nurses’ expertise and treat them like interchangeable pawns.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 30, 2024.