Ontario Shores eliminates 55 positions to balance budget
February 26, 2010
WHITBY - Ontario Shores is eliminating 55 positions at the
former Whitby Mental Health Centre in order to cope with
underfunding from the Ministry of Health.
Forty of the positions will receive layoff notices, while 15
workers will be redeployed following contracting-out of their
work.
"Given the priority the province is placing on mental health,
these layoffs come as a surprise," says Warren (Smokey) Thomas,
president of the 130,000 member Ontario Public Service Employees
Union (OPSEU). "The ministry of health should talk to the
ministry of finance - one is trying to create jobs by
stimulating the economy, the other is eliminating jobs at an
astonishing rate across the province."
Ontario Shores is eliminating front line workers from nine
different classifications covering all three bargaining units.
These job losses will impact patient care.
Under the terms of their collective agreement
with OPSEU, Ontario Shores is obliged to find positions for
members who lose their jobs due to contracting out, however, the
union is concerned the 15 workers may only have a temporary
landing.
"There have been so many programs cut at Ontario Shores that
patients are left on the wards with nothing to do," says Thomas.
The union is also upset that patients have been targeted with an
increase to the cost of food at the canteen and the lack of
transportation to and from appointments in the community.
With cuts to transportation, OPSEU questions how forensic
patients will get to court appearances and to off-site medical
appointments.
In addition to eliminating 55 positions, Ontario Shores has
announced that it is closing one of two Beacon House sites. The
Oshawa site will now be closed permanently. Beacon House is a
residential treatment program serving individuals with complex
personality problems that have resulted in psychiatric
hospitalizations and frequent involvement with community
services.
Ontario Shores has also closed Challenging Directions
Enterprises, a Whitby-based outpatient workshop that provides
work experience to 75-80 clients each day. The sheltered
workshop closed its doors February 23rd.
OPSEU believe the layoffs are a partial response to a growing
legion of managers being employed at Ontario Shores. This
expanding list of managers is beginning to displace programming
space for clients as Ontario Shores seeks to find new office
space to accommodate them.