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ADDITIONAL ARTICLES:  Ecker Missing in Action   MCSS won't divulge stats   YO's will be sold   Ministry going out of business   Ministry shafts VRS Counsellors


 
July 1998

Surprised? Municipal delivery to cost more than our FBA

By Bob Eaton,
MCSS MERC chair

For years, your MCSS MERC team has said that spiralling caseloads are severely impacting the Income Maintenance Officer's ability to provide quality service. A recent report by the Provincial Auditor substantiated this.

Now we are told that the government's “Social Assistance Transformation” plan will cut caseloads to 33 per cent of former levels.

In essence, the government now says that municipal service delivery agents will be able to hire three times the number of caseworkers as the provincial system. Caseloads will be as low as 115 to 1 under municipal delivery, while under the provincially administered Family Benefits, caseloads were upwards of 400 to 1.

The average cost per case will now skyrocket from approximately $300 per case per year to more than $1,300. The 90,000 sole support, foster care cases will grow, carrying an administrative price tag of an extra $90 million per year.

Where will the extra money come from? Taxpayers. Why wasn't caseload size addressed under the former FBA? Good question.

Clearly, the downloading of family benefits delivery to municipalities won't really save taxpayers' money, putting the lie to the Tory agenda.

Ecker missing in action

While Janet Ecker preens on a province-wide pre-election media blitz, her ministry languishes.

A revolving door of consultants and human resources directors have been left in command.

“You get a real sense that they don't know what they're doing over there,” said OPSEU President Leah Casselman. “In a downsizing of this size (800 jobs), you need to have a plan that works for everyone.”

As the year-end deadline looms, MCSS has failed to induce many municipalities to take provincial social workers and clerical staff under welfare/workfare downloading legislation. And some of the deals trample workers' rights.

On May 12, the ministry agreed to pay Peel Region $6,500 for any permanent job offer to provincial employees to fill 49 vacancies with the region. But the deal also stipulates that Peel refuse permanent jobs to provincial workers who received severance pay under the OPSEU contract.

“I'm betting that won't stand up in court,” she said.

Developmental Services:

MCSS won't divulge stats on comparative costs of care

By Linda McDowell
Developmental Services Division

In April, 1997, your OPSEU MERC team requested the employer reveal per diem rates for Schedule 1 facilities for Developmental Services, Schedule 2 facilities and transfer payment agencies, so that we could compare the costs of the three types of care.

At the MERC meeting in August, 1997, the ministry requested a more detailed request and that it be made in writing. OPSEU gave the ministry a detailed request in writing and also asked that the Associations for Community Living be included.

There was a lengthy discussion on how costs in the different facilities were paid: costs for medication, doctors, dentists etc. The union asked that these be broken down and included in the report.

Month after month, OPSEU asked for this report at each MERC meeting and asked why it was taking so long to get it. Finally, last February, management came up with a report that did not break down the costs as requested, making it very difficult, if not impossible, to compare the costs in the various systems.

On April 1, Midwestern Regional Centre closed its doors. AOC Edgar is continuing to place its clients at the projected times to be closed by March 1999 or sooner.

Prince Edward Heights has 55 residents that the ministry cannot place until the outcome of the reasonable efforts grievance is finally decided. The employer has tried several tactics to get around this award, but so far, Mr. Kaplan's award has been upheld. There are still three dates set for hearing - July 7, 8 and 16. This may throw off the ministry's target date.

The remaining three facilities continue to place the clients that they have made placement plans for, but can't make new plans for anyone else because of the Kaplan award.

Ecker: YOs will be sold

How would you feel going to the moon in a rocket built by the lowest bidder?

That's what Janet Ecker and her ministry gurus tell us must happen. OPSEU representatives met with the Minister May 26 to discover that she has learned the fine art of the “broken record.” After months of saying that the seven directly-operated facilities for young offenders were to be privatized to save taxpayers money, our offer to negotiate savings was turned down cold. All Ecker could say is that “alternative service delivery” is the direction of the ministry.

OPSEU engaged in months of campaigning to save 500 jobs that care for 400 of the most troubled young offenders: Info pickets, leaflet blitzes, lobbying MPPs, a brief to Ecker, town forums, petitions, media and a lot of support from the NDP's Peter Kormos. Youth crime will be an election issue.

Overview from the MERC Chair:

Ministry going out of business

by Bob Eaton,
MERC Chair

Your MERC team believes in reasonable negotiations. We have solutions. We have proposals. The Ministry has one goal: to get out of business. Please support us as we fight for our membership, our clients and our communities.

Here's how the union/management positions stacked up on our major issues:

Social Assistance:

OPSEU position: For the sake of program integrity and in the spirit of effective human resources practice, do not proceed with Social Assistance surplusing until ODSP is fully operational.

Employer response: Surplusing will occur as sites are transferred.

OPSEU position: The Ministry is bound by Appendix 9 and Art. 20 provisions of the Collective Agreement for the transfer of work to municipalities.

Employer response: The Peel Region Deal is representative of the Ministry's best efforts regarding Reasonable Efforts. Pay will be approximately 85 per cent of Ministry level. Benefits will not be included. Members will have to go through a pre-screening process, an interview and if successful, complete a six-month period of probation. Seniority will not be respected.

OPSEU position: Consider innovative methods to transfer staff and files during the social assistance transformation.

Employer response: The ministry is negotiating with the new service delivery agents with no union input. In Peel, MCSS has offered the delivery agent $6,500 per employee to exit. In essence, MCSS is buying short-term jobs to avoid paying our members the appropriate package.

Young Offenders:

OPSEU position: Discuss the Ministry's decision to privatize the seven DOE secure custody and treatment facilities. We are committed to finding fiscal savings.

Employer response: No. This is not about quality services or costs, it's about getting out of direct service.

Systems Officers:

OPSEU position: Consider training opportunities to use existing Systems Officers for ministry needs. Employer response: Ministry is hiring consultants (including eight systems specialists for four years) at $8 million, dictated by market demand.

ODSP/VRS:

OPSEU position: VRS counsellors should have an integral role in the new ODSP program. With appropriate interventions, members of the disabled community can become productive members of the workforce.

Employer response: Due to the OPSEU policy grievance, we are not participating in further discussion.

Developmental Services Facilities:

OPSEU position: Reconsider closure and downsizing plans for facilities. Our clients consider these places as home. Their special needs require skilled, professional service.

Employer response: Placement in community agencies will proceed.

Ministry shafts VRS Counsellors in shift to ODSP and privates

By Peter Dirks,
VRS Division Chair

With the proclamation of the Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP), the province abandoned its Vocational Rehabilitation Services (VRS) program.

Surplus notices to VRS counsellors and clerical staff will go out in September, as ODSP is scheduled for implementation this fall.

The ODSP is designed to save money by cutting staff. It will employ fewer counsellors and clerical staff: only a handful will be offered jobs. Managers have told their VRS staff that they will have to re-apply for jobs in the new program, and these jobs will mean lower pay.

OPSEU filed a “failure to make reasonable efforts” grievance with respect to transfer of VRS work. Arbitration on the grievance is pending.

Meanwhile, the employer says it will continue to privatize home and vehicle modifications.

The employer wants VRS counsellors to help facilitate the change to ODSP.

Why should we? The employer has done little for us. The ministry has not negotiated possible redeployment opportunities that might exist in the Ministry of Health, OSAP, attorney-general, etc. The employer has not asked the community colleges and universities about the transfer of VRS counsellors to similar employment in the education sector. The employer has not addressed the development of any human resources plans for VRS counsellor.

The employer has used the filing of the grievance as an excuse for not answering questions about VRS and the new employment support program.

OPSEU will continue to fight for VRS staff, and work towards the goal of job retention and creating job opportunities in the ODSP.

The new employment support program lacks vision. The ministry must use the professional skills of VRS counsellors to assist persons with disabilities develop their skills and succeed in the workplace.

Share your thoughts and join our fight!

Contact Peter Dirks. your OPSEU MERC representative and VRS Divisional Chair.

 

   

Ontario Public Service Employees Union, 100 Lesmill Rd. Toronto, ON M3B 3P8  (416) 443-8888  www.opseu.org     

 

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