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Temporary agency workers have long been a crutch for a care system in crisis, experts say. Now, they are exempt from new COVID-19 health directives

The Star Article

Temporary agency workers have long been a crutch for a care system in crisis, experts say. Now, they are exempt from new COVID-19 health directives

 

Febe Jimenez, a personal support worker at a Hamilton-area retirement home, said that home is dependent on employment agencies filling frequent staffing shortages.

Long before the pandemic hit, “working short” was a chronic problem for personal support worker Febe Jimenez.

Staff were overloaded on a good day at her Hamilton-area retirement home; a single worker’s absence could throw an already tenuous care system built on low pay and long hours into disarray. For temporary relief, she says, help was habitually drafted in from three separate staffing agencies: one for nurses, one for night shift, and one for day shift.

“Before this happened, we were going through agencies like crazy,” Jimenez said.

 

A new directive issued by the province this week limits the movement of health-care workers between facilities in a bid to contain the devastating spread of COVID-19 in nursing homes. But the directive does not apply to agency workers, who earn their living floating from home to home.

It’s an exemption critics call a health risk — and a sign.

“It shows just how desperate the Ontario government is to adequately staff these long-term care facilities,” said Candace Rennick, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and a long-time nursing home worker.

“We know there is a complete staffing crisis with respect to shortages and retention and recruitment. They are so reliant on this temporary agency contract work that they need to exempt them from a fundamental order to keep people safe.”

 

In a statement to the Star, a spokesperson for Minister of Long Term Care Merrilee Fullerton said the order did not apply to “agency workers or other critical contract staff” in order to “ensure a steady supply of staff available to work on an emergency basis in long-term care homes.”

“To ensure the safety of long-term care residents, these workers are subject to ‘active screening’ direction set out in a directive by the Chief Medical Officer of Health, which requires a rigorous screening process before being permitted entry into a long-term care home,” the statement said.

Even for directly-hired personal support workers, poor pay has long meant juggling multiple jobs at different homes, says Sharlene Stewart, president of Services Employees International Union Healthcare.

“Workers absolutely want one full-time job. But when you pay them so poorly … you have to work two jobs to barely make a living,” she said.

In light of the pandemic, the government has said these workers can pick one employer and take job-protected leaves of absence from others to comply with new directives.The province has also said it “encourages” long-term-care employers to offer full-time hours to part-time workers.