Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Hospitals Ordered To Freeze Parking Rates And Offer Multi-Day Discounts

The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2016 11:47 AM
    TORONTO — Ontario hospitals that charge more than $10 a day for parking were ordered Monday to immediately freeze rates, and to start offering multi-day discount passes by Oct. 1.
     
    The hospitals will have to offer five-, 10- and 30-day passes that discount parking rates by 50 per cent to ease the financial burden on patients and their visitors, said Health Minister Eric Hoskins. The passes would be transferable between patients and their caregivers and would come with in-and-out privileges for a 24-hour period.
     
    "This is important because we know that patients who are surrounded by loved ones get better faster, and we want to be sure their loved ones are there to help them through their health care challenges," Hoskins said at the new Women's College Hospital.
     
    "When you have a loved one who has been sick and in hospital for a lengthy stay you  have many things that you're already worried about. One of those things should not be how you're going to afford hospital parking."
     
    Susan Kuczynski, a member of a group of parents of children with cancer, said the government's move would help provide some relief from the high cost of parking at some hospitals for families that have to make many repeat visits.
     
    "Parking has been amongst the most highly ranked issues that Ontario parents advocating for children with cancer face," said Kuczynski. "It's mind boggling."
     
    The Ontario Hospital Association quickly condemned Hoskins' announcement, and said the Liberal government not only froze hospital budgets for the past four years, it also encouraged them to find new sources of revenue.
     
    "Revenue generated from parking fees is always used for patient care, towards the purchase of capital equipment and projects, infrastructure, clinical research, and day-to-day operations such as facility maintenance," OHA president Anthony Dale said in a statement. "The decision to cut revenues could not come at worse time."
     
    Dale said Ontario hospitals need transitional funding to offset the expected decline in parking revenues.
     
     
    Hoskins admitted parking generates about $100 million a year for Ontario hospitals, but he didn't offer additional funding.
     
    "Hospitals use that revenue for important purposes, so we've taken that into account," he said. "This will obviously reduce that net profit, but it varies pretty significantly from hospital to hospital, and at the end of the day it is a tiny, tiny portion of any individual hospital's budget."
     
    Hospitals that charge under $10 a day for parking will be "encouraged" to offer multi-day discount passes as well, said Hoskins.
     
    The issue becomes "more complex" when the hospitals don't own their parking lots, which is the case at about 20 of the 147 hospital corporations in the province, including Kingston General, Sick Kids in Toronto and the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario.
     
    "We will be working with those hospitals to make best efforts, so that whether it's a municipal lot or a privately-run lot, that we try to accrue those same benefits to frequent users," said Hoskins.
     
    Each hospital will have to work with patient and family advisory groups on the details of the parking plans, which Hoskins estimates will benefit about 900,000 patients and their visitors each year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women
    The 19-year-old was abducted as she walked down the streets of The Pas, Man., in November 1971. Later that night, she was stabbed to death with a screwdriver dozens of times.

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow
    Environment Canada has issued wind warnings for the north and central coasts, Haida Gwaii, northern and eastern Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast, with 100 kilometre per hour winds not due to ease until Thursday.

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police
      RCMP say a 49-year-old man was arrested last Thursday after police received two reports of money being taken from poppy donations.

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police

    Modi Marks Diwali With Army Men Along Pakistan Border

    Modi Marks Diwali With Army Men Along Pakistan Border
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday visited forward areas in Punjab, close to the India-Pakistan international border, to spend time with army personnel on the occasion of Diwali.

    Modi Marks Diwali With Army Men Along Pakistan Border

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians
    Surrey RCMP say a 39-year-old woman was hit just after 6 p.m. Tuesday as she crossed a street (in the 12500 block of 75A Avenue) near the Newton Recreation Centre

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home
    RCMP say a man approached the girl outside her home and tried to force his way inside

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home