Unpredictable work hours, vehicle expenses forcing workers out of home care, unions say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:35 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Unpredictable work hours, vehicle expenses forcing workers out of home care, unions say

The union representing home support workers says dozens of members have left the home-care sector in the past year because of uncertain hours or high vehicle expenses.

CUPE says 10% of its continuing-care workers quit in the past year

Two women in masks help an older woman in a wheelchair in a nursing home room with photos on the walls.
Continuing care assistants Kamal Kaur, left, and Sherlyn Monteroso, right, help a resident at St. Vincent's Nursing Home in Halifax in this 2021 file photo. (Communications Nova Scotia)

Nova Scotians who want to be caredfor at home are facing long waitsorare notgetting the level of care they were promised because of a shortage of nurses and home support workers, accordingto the unions who represent these workers.

That grim reality was shared with members of the provincial legislature's health committee on Tuesday when it heard from two unions leaders, a provincial government official and the Victorian Order of Nurses,one of the 18 organizations providing home care in Nova Scotia.

Although there's a nursing shortage in home care, the problem is bigger when it comes to the people who provide non-medical support at home, including personal care or light housework.

Nan McFadgen,president ofthe Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Nova Scotia,told the committee in the past year alone her union has seen its membershipamong continuing-care assistants drop by 10 per cent or by 50 people, from 500 to 450.

McFadgensaid she expected the decline to continue until the provincial government provided enough money to service organizations so they canoffer full-time work to their continuing-care assistants.

Five people sit in a row at a long table, facing forward. There are microphones in front of them. Several others are sitting in the background.
Nan McFadgen, President of CUPE Nova Scotia, far right, testified before the Nova Scotia Legislatures Health Committee on Tuesday. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

"The conditions of work are the conditions of care for the clients we serve, and right now the conditions of work in home support are in a staffing crisis," McFadgen told the committee. "Without the workers it's impossible to provide the home support and community services."

McFadgen said many of her members didn't know from week to week how many hours they willwork and, despite inflation, arenot being reimbursed for the full cost of using their own vehiclesto travel between clients.

Evelyn Doucette, acontinuing-care assistantwith 25 years of experience working for the New Waterford Home Care Service Society, spent roughly 10 years living that kind of work-life. She is now getting full-time hours but worries about her younger colleagues.

"They're frustrated. They're scared," Doucette told CBC News in a phone interview from her home in Glace Bay. "They work not knowing if they're going to have enough hours each week."

"I've actually heard from a few this week that have said their schedules are very sparse. They only have a few hours here and there."

Doucette said in the past year about a half dozen CCAsshe worked with have left home care to work in a hospital or long term-care facility.

"They don't have to have a vehicle in those places because they can just go there and they're there for the day," she said."They're guaranteed their shift. When they're called out for an eight-hour shift, they get an eight-hour shift. So it's easier for CCA to workin those environments."

Both Doucette and McFadgen said home-care workersneedguaranteed full-time hours and adequate compensation for their out-of-pocket expenses.

Safety also a concern: union

Janet Hazelton, president of the Nova Scotia Nurses' Union, saidthe safety of home-care nurses is a concern because the majoritywork on their own and often have no idea what kind of situationsthey are about to walk into when they enter a home particularlyduring evening and night shifts.

"The home environment is often unpredictable and nurses havevery little control over enforcing rules around hazards likesmoking, pets, firearms," Hazelton said.

She said there should be two people per house call to help ensureworker safety at the very least during the initial assessmentvisit.

But Tracey Barbrick, deputy minister for the Department of Seniors and Long-Term Care, said Hazelton's suggestion would be a challenge to implement given staffing shortages of around 10 per cent across the home- and long-term care system.

Adepartment spokespersonlater told CBC News the staff vacancy rate in long-term care is about nine per cent, while about 13 per cent of positions in home care are unfilled including full-time, part-time, and casual positions.

Jeff Densmore, regional executive director with the Victorian Order of Nurses, confirmed to reportersfollowing the meeting thathis organization has a "significant staffing deficit".

"We're short about 170 [continuing-care assistants]out of about 700 or 800 [positions]," said Densmore. "It's a little bit better on the nursing side but we still have a deficit on the nursing side" of about 100.

A man with grey hair and a blue suit sits with his arms crossed over a table, looking pensive. There is a pen in his hand and a microphone in front of him.
Jeff Densmore is regional executive director of the Victorian Order of Nurses in Nova Scotia. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

Densworth noted the areas with the longest waits for home care from his organization were in the Annapolis Valley, and the counties of Pictou, Colchester andEast Hants.

Barbricktold reporters there were about 900 people on the province's waiting list for home care.

"About half of them are getting some level of care but not all the hours they've been approved for," said Barbrick. "A bunch of those people would be getting direct benefits, where we essentially give them the money [to purchase the servicesthey need]."

Although McFadgen raised her concerns at the beginning of the meeting, no committee member questioned her about the issues she raised unpredictablehours andout of pocket expenses.

That led her to use her closing statement to express her disappointment.

"I would leave you with this," she said. "We have workers that are not getting enough hours to live ... and that none of you asked any questions about that, is not hopeful for our members who will be watching this.

"You've left them with not a lot of hope, and that kind of sucks."

With files from the Canadian Press