Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tentative Deal Reached With Security Staff At Winnipeg's Largest Hospital

The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2015 12:31 PM
  • Tentative Deal Reached With Security Staff At Winnipeg's Largest Hospital
WINNIPEG — A tentative contract deal has been reached for security staff at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre.
 
The agreement between the Manitoba Government and General Employees' Union and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority still needs to be ratified.
 
Union president Michelle Gawronsky says security employees are to vote on the proposal Tuesday and Wednesday.
 
She says it will be back to the bargaining table if the deal isn't approved.
 
A strike date has been set for Dec. 22.
 
Security staff at the hospital have gone without a new contract for roughly 3 1/2 years.
 
Gawronsky says their biggest concern is retention.
 
“The danger and the situations that they find they are in protecting staff, visitors and patients puts them ... in very high-risk situations and unfortunately their wages didn’t reflect that," she said Monday.
 
"People that came into work there didn’t stay very long and used it as a stepping stone to get into the RCMP (or) city police. Or once they realized the danger they would have to put themselves in to continue with employment, they just left and found other jobs.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Addiction Experts Say Canada Should Learn From U.S. Pot Experience

Addiction Experts Say Canada Should Learn From U.S. Pot Experience
The new federal government should proceed slowly with changing the country's drug laws, says the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, which has released a report on the U.S.'s experience legalizing cannabis.

Addiction Experts Say Canada Should Learn From U.S. Pot Experience

Revenues Top $5.8Million In Chase The Ace Lottery That Drew Thousands To Nova Scotia

Revenues Top $5.8Million In Chase The Ace Lottery That Drew Thousands To Nova Scotia
Committee spokesperson Cameron MacQuarrie says more than 3.5 million tickets were sold for the Chase the Ace fundraiser over its 48-week run in Cape Breton's Inverness.

Revenues Top $5.8Million In Chase The Ace Lottery That Drew Thousands To Nova Scotia

A Dozen U.S. States Want Door Slammed On Refugees, As Political Rift Deepens

The Paris attacks have exposed an ideological cleavage in western countries over the handling of the Syrian refugee crisis, with the political left and right at odds over welcoming migrants.

A Dozen U.S. States Want Door Slammed On Refugees, As Political Rift Deepens

Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec

Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec
SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Closing arguments are set to begin today at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial.

Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec

Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff

Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff
Manitoba Opposition Leader Brian Pallister is accusing the NDP government of going on a hiring spree over the past year, but the government says Pallister's math is wrong.

Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff

Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne

Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne
TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says the 10,000 Syrian refugees the province has committed to taking in is "a big number," but there are millions of people in need.

Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne