TORONTO – The government takeover of ORNGE air ambulance
should serve as warning to taxpayers that the privatization of public
services only succeeds in harming services and making a select few
executives millionaires with public money, says the Ontario Public Service
Employees Union.
Warren (Smokey) Thomas, President of OPSEU, said the
government needs to learn from their mistakes and immediately halt any plans
to privatize government-run services such as ServiceOntario.
“How many spending scandals must this government deal with
before they learn that privatizing public services harms the public?” asked
Thomas. “First there was eHealth, now ORNGE. The only thing these ventures
accomplished was to create a cash cow for a few corporate executives, who
lined their pockets with millions in taxpayers’ money.”
Roxanne Barnes, elected chair of Ontario’s 40,000 direct
government employees, says that government plans to privatize the province’s
ServiceOntario locations will only lead to the same problems with
out-of-control spending and service reductions.
“When people pay their taxes, they expect services to be
efficient, well-run and accountable with their money,” Barnes said. “What
gets proven over and over is that when the government gives up
responsibility for delivering services, it’s the taxpayers who pay more in
the long run.”
Thomas says that the Ontario government needs to finally
learn from their mistakes and stop letting private operators profit from
services and public money.
“Albert Einstein once said that the definition of insanity
is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different
results,” Thomas said. “We need sound thinking from this government and for
them to stop bowing to corporate pressure to turn public services into
get-rich schemes. The only way to be accountable for services to have them
run by accountable, elected officials and delivered by professional
public-sector workers. The Premier’s plans for more privatization will just
create more messes that he has to go back and clean up.”