B.C. health firings: lawyer says investigative process unfair - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:41 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. health firings: lawyer says investigative process unfair

A number of former B.C. Ministry of Health workers say they will be saddled with high legal fees unlike the employees who potentially wronged them.

Joanna Gislason says, unlike ministry employees, her clients will be saddled with high legal fees

B.C. Premier Christy Clark has faced repeated questions about her office's involvement in the firing of eight Ministry of Health workers in 2012. (Darryl Dick/The Canadian Press)

A number of former B.C. Ministry of Health workers say the Office of the Ombudsperson's investigation into their 2012 firings is unfair because they will be saddled with high legal fees, and they don't have the same access as current employeesto relevant documents.

Former employees Ramsay Hamdi, David Scottand Linda Kayfish, thesister of former co-op student, Roderick MacIsaac, who died by suicide after his firing, have retained Joanna Gislason to represent them duringB.C. Ombudsperson Jay Chalke's investigation.

University of Victoria PhD candidate Roderick MacIsaac, committed suicide three months after he was fired by the B.C. government. His sister is being represented by lawyer Joanna Gislason during B.C. Ombudsperson Jay Chalkes investigation.

"More than three and a half years have gone by since they were wrongfully fired and publicly defamed," Gislason told On The Coast host Stephen Quinn. "And they still want to know what happened to them. They want to know that,through a transparent and effective fact-finding process that's fair to them."

Gislason says her clients will only be given $1,000 inlegal fees while the current Ministry of Health employees, "who potentially wronged them," will receive $25,000.

As well, Gislason says her clients will not be able to access their work emails and other work-related documents, but current employees will.

"It makes very little sense, and frankly, it only adds to the unfairness these individuals have already been through," she said.

Gislason argues that since theombudsperson investigation is compelling her clientsand eight other former healthcare workersto testify, they should have the same resources afforded to them as in a court of law.


To hear the full story, click the audio labelled:Lawyer for fired B.C. health workers criticizes ombudsperson process