QUEEN’S PARK
--- The Ontario Public Service
Employees Union has launched a TV
and radio advertising campaign
highlighting the crisis in services
for people with developmental
disabilities.
More than a decade of cuts and
under-funding has left agencies
unable to provide the level of care
they once could. At the same time,
more than 6,000 people are on
waiting lists for services, and
1,600 more are kept in wards of
long-term care facilities without
the specialized services they need.
“To many of us, people with
developmental disabilities are
invisible,” said OPSEU President
Leah Casselman. “As a result, the
Ontario government has been able to
get away with under-funding critical
support services. This ad campaign
is aimed at changing that.”
“Having a developmental disability
doesn’t limit someone from living a
fulfilling life,” added Sue Walker,
a Developmental Services Worker and
chair of the OPSEU Developmental
Services Sector. “We work with
people with a range of disabilities
and help them to fulfill their
potential.”
According to the agencies providing
supports, one of the biggest
problems is an inability to pay
competitive wages, said Casselman.
“Developmental service workers earn
25 to 30 per cent less than
employees in comparable jobs. That’s
why these agencies can’t attract and
retain enough qualified staff to
provide the level of support people
with developmental disabilities
need.”
A report prepared by Community
Living Ontario, OASIS and other
developmental service organizations
said the government needs to invest
$253 million in new ongoing funding
to begin to address the service
crisis.
“Clearly, as our ads say, Ontario
can do better,” said Casselman. “If
you knew the people our members
support, you’d know they deserve
better.”
The ads will run for the next three
weeks in London, Hamilton, Northern
Ontario and the Peterborough area.
The ad can be viewed at
www.ontariocandobetter.ca
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Image caption to go here.
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For more
information, please contact:
Sarah Jordison, OPSEU
Communications: 416-453-8049
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