Ontario's community health sector launches campaign, profiling staffing challenges and impacts on patient care 

Date: 
Thursday, October 17, 2024

# Community Health Sector calls for investments to close the growing wage gap for frontline workers 

 

Toronto, OCTOBER 17, 2024 – Today, the Alliance for Healthier Communities, along with nine other provincial associations representing Ontario’s community health sector and its hundreds of thousands of dedicated staff, are standing together to raise wide awareness of the large and growing wage gap impacting the care that millions of people in Ontario rely on.   

A new campaign launched today, entitled For Us. For You., highlights the need for urgent investments in Ontario’s community health sector to ensure crucial services and supports remain available to meet the needs of people of all ages.  

Ontario’s community health sector is made up of over 200,000 workers in primary care, mental health and addictions organizations, home and community care, long-term care, and other community health settings. These workers help provide the right care in the right setting and keep Ontarians out of busy emergency departments and hospitals.  

Despite their critical roles and the rising cost of living, community health workers face a combined wage gap of over $2 billion compared to their peers doing similar work in other publicly funded settings, including in hospitals and schools.  

This growing wage gap is causing unprecedented staffing shortages, impacting the care Ontarians rely on. A recent survey conducted by the associations indicated that 94 per cent of community health organizations identify compensation as the biggest challenge with hiring and keeping staff. As a result, over 80 per cent are seeing wait times for services and supports continue to grow. 

For Us. For You. wants to work with Ontario’s government to:  

  • Invest over $500 million each year over the next five years to close the wage gap, in addition to sustainable and ongoing annual increases in line with projected inflation; 

  • Address Bill 124 shortfalls that continue to impact the community health sector; and  

  • Establish a working group with government to develop a sustainable approach to building and supporting the community health sector workforce. 

Closing the wage gap means care in the community will be there when the people of Ontario need it, now and in the future. 

 

QUOTES FROM SECTOR LEADERS ON THE WAGE GAP CRISIS:

“The growing wage gap is more than just a financial issue – it threatens the very foundation of care in Ontario’s communities. Rising staffing shortages and increasing wait times for mental health and addictions services have put the health and well-being of Ontarians at risk. Paying community health workers fair wages means better access to care, when and where it is needed. Our coalition is ready to work together with this government to close the wage gap and build a community health sector that meets the needs of all Ontarians.” 

- Karen O’Connor, CEO, Addictions and Mental Health Ontario  

  

"Not-for-profit seniors' care providers, including long-term care, have faced a staffing crisis for many years now, including well before the pandemic. We're asking the government to close the $2-billion wage gap for community health workers, so we can ensure that staff in senior care and other community settings receive equal wages for equal work, and to ensure our members are properly staffed to give Ontario's seniors the care they need, when they need it."  

- Lisa Levin, CEO, AdvantAge Ontario 

  

“Community health workers – from dietitians and physiotherapists to nurses and health promoters, and everyone else who helps make up the primary health care team – are the foundation of our health system. These folks are the core members of community health organizations, which people in Ontario depend on every single day to stay well and out of the hospital. Community health workers, and the teams they are part of, are being left behind. Many teams in Ontario have staffing gaps due to the wage inequities that unequal pay creates. For health care to be convenient and connected and delivered in the community, we need the Ontario government to step up now and pay community health workers fairly. The local health care services that people in communities across the province expect to be there for them require urgent government support, so we can recruit and retain dedicated and committed staff in the months and years ahead.” 

- Sarah Hobbs, CEO, Alliance for Healthier Communities 

 

“Primary care teams are experiencing ongoing recruitment and retention challenges, driven by wage disparities and the inability to offer competitive compensation. These staffing shortages result in fewer professionals available to provide the care patients need, leading to delays and reduced access to services. Addressing pay parity is a practical and necessary step to ensure we can attract and retain the skilled professionals required to maintain consistent, high-quality primary care for all Ontarians.” 

- Dr. Kevin Samson, President, Association of Family Health Teams of Ontario 

  

“The community mental health and addictions workforce continues to struggle with staff retention and difficulty attracting new workers at a time when there is a surge in demand for our services. Meanwhile, the wage gap for the community health sector continues to grow. Our staff deserve to be paid an equivalent living wage as that of their counterparts in health and other sectors so that they can focus on providing quality care for Ontarians.” 

- Camille Quenneville, CEO, Canadian Mental Health Association Ontario 

  

“There is a crisis in child and youth mental health that we can’t solve without addressing workforce shortages. Too many families are turning to hospitals in distress because of long wait times and a lack of treatment availability at community-based child and youth mental health centres. This is further exacerbated by frontline vacancies and high turnover because our wages can’t compete with hospitals and schools.” 

- Tatum Wilson, CEO, Children’s Mental Health Ontario   

  

“By addressing wage disparity, we can strengthen the entire system and ensure that Ontarians have access to the comprehensive care they need, when and where they need it.”  

- Susan Somogyi, CEO, Family Service Ontario 

 

“For Indigenous communities and the Indigenous primary health care organizations that serve them, community health workers are inclusive of Traditional Healing practitioners that play a key role in ensuring that First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples have access to culturally safe care spaces for integrated primary health care. The health human resources crises due to the growing wage gap leads to an inability to retain staff to continue creating and sustaining culturally safe environments. Addressing the wage gap means putting funding and resources in place to ensure community health workers are compensated equitably so that they can continue to advance Indigenous cultural safety in all care spaces.” 

- Caroline Lidstone- Jones, CEO, Indigenous Primary Health Care Council  

  

“Primary care has been battling a human resources crisis for the past three years that continues to escalate, fueled by wage inequalities and a lack of government investment in our highly valuable and skilled workforce. Recruitment and retention issues have become a daily concern as staff vacancy and turnover rates have reached 40 per cent annually. Primary care is not sustainable as the foundation of the health care system if we do not receive an ongoing equitable investment to keep the workforce in place.” 

- Valerie Winberg, President, Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinic Association  

 

“Ontario’s entire community health sector is facing a staffing crisis caused by the wage gap. In the home and community care sector, organizations are battling 20 per cent average frontline vacancy rates, and it is becoming more difficult to recruit and retain the workers we need. The government needs to continue to invest in the home and community care workforce to close the wage gap and ensure that Ontarians have access to the right care in the right place.”  

- Deborah Simon, CEO, Ontario Community Support Association  

 

About the Campaign: For Us. For You. represents Ontario’s community health sector coming together in support of our workers and the Ontarians we care for. The campaign is a collaborative effort by 10 provincial associations, representing over 200,000 community workers who together care for millions of Ontarians, seeking to work with the Ontario government to find solutions for the health human resources facing the sector. 

The associations include: 

  • Addictions and Mental Health Ontario; 

  • AdvantAge Ontario; 

  • Alliance for Healthier Communities; 

  • Association of Family Health Teams of Ontario;  

  • Canadian Mental Health Association Ontario;  

  • Children’s Mental Health Ontario;  

  • Family Service Ontario; 

  • Indigenous Primary Health Care Council 

  • Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinic Association 

  • Ontario Community Support Association 

 

For media inquiries, please contact:  

Jason Rehel, 416-236-2539 ext 312 or jason.rehel@allianceon.org

 

Co-Designing Integrated and Equitable Supports for Newcomers & Refugees

This event is presented by National Newcomer Navigation Network. 

The settlement experiences of newcomers to Canada are shaped by broader social, systemic, and structural forces that can be better understood using an intersectional lens.

# Speakers: 

  • Dr. Ibukun Abejirinde  Scientist, Institute for Better Health, Trillium Health Partners
  • Isabelle Choon-Kon-Yune  Research Assistant, Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care
  • Dr. Nancy Clark  Associate Professor, Qualitative Health Researcher, University of Victoria

 

Details
Wednesday, November 13, 2024 - 13:00
1 PM - 2 PM
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

2024 EPIC Symposium

This event is presented by Emerging and Pandemic Infections Consortium (EPIC) 

The Emerging & Pandemic Infections Consortium are back again with their annual EPIC Symposium on October 17th, 2024, at the Toronto Reference Library. This one day event will bring together Toronto’s infectious diseases research community and some of the world’s foremost experts in infectious diseases to meet, learn, and network. The symposium will feature:

  • keynote presentations by national and international infectious diseases researchers,
  • talks by EPIC faculty and trainees,
  • lunch, featuring trainee connection tables with keynote speakers and panel discussion chair,
  • a panel discussion on how to engage globally while developing effective responses to infectious threats, and,
  • a networking reception

 

 

Details
Thursday, October 17, 2024 - 08:30
8:30 AM- 7:00 PM
Cost: 
$0 - $120
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Toronto Reference Library
789 Yonge St
Toronto, ON M4W 2G8

ECHO: Transitioning pediatric patients to adult chronic pain management

This event is presented by Project ECHO and UHN

  • Open to all health care providers
  • No cost to participate
  • Access to an interprofessional specialist team
  • Earn CPD Credits
  • Present your cases for support from the ECHO community 

 

If you would like to present a case please contact sarah.tea@uhn.ca

See the flyer for more information. 

Details
Tuesday, October 22, 2024 - 19:00
7:00 PM
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

Divided City: Life Expectancy in Toronto Neighbourhoods

This webinar is presented by The Local.

A conversation with the researchers and journalists behind the first-ever analysis of life expectancy in Toronto neighbourhoods

# Host 

Inori Roy, Associate Editor, The Local 

# Speakers

Dr. Stephen Hwang, Physician and Director of MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions, St. Michael's Hospital 

Dr. Laura Rosella, Professor, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto 

Tai Huynh, Editor-in-Chief, The Local 

Nicholas Hune-Brown, Executive Editor, The Local

Details
Thursday, October 10, 2024 - 16:00
4:00 - 5:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Former les formateurs : S'inscrire et voter lors d’une élection fédérale

Présenté en collaboration avec Élections Canada. 

# À propos de ce webinaire

Ce webinaire «Former les formateurs» s'adresse aux membres de l'Alliance et aux partenaires communautaires intéressés par l'animation de l'atelier d'Élections Canada «S'inscrire et voter lors d’une élection fédérale». Découvrez le contenu de l'atelier, les activités et les outils disponibles pour vous aider à préparer votre communauté locale pour la prochaine élection fédérale. 

Ce webinaire aussi sera présenté en anglais le mardi, 12 novembre 2024. Cliquez ici pour plus de détails

#  À propos d'Élections Canada et du programme Inspirer la démocratie : 

Élections Canada a un programme appelé «Inspirer la démocratie» dont l'objectif est de réduire les obstacles à la participation électorale. Consultez le site web pour obtenir des informations sur la manière de surmonter ces obstacles, accéder à une série de trousses d'outils et trouver des liens vers des ressources pour soutenir l'engagement lors des élections fédérales. 

# Serie webinaire sur l'engagement civique

Il s'agit du deuxième webinaire sur le thème des élections et de l'engagement civique. Vous pourriez également être intéressé par :  

Details
Wednesday, November 13, 2024 - 12:00
12 h à 13 h
Cost: 
Gratuit
Event Type: 
Location

Former les formateurs : Travailler à une élection fédérale

Présenté en collaboration avec Élections Canada. 

# #À propos de ce webinaire

Ce webinaire «Former les formateurs» s'adresse aux membres de l'Alliance et aux partenaires communautaires intéressés par l'animation de l'atelier d'Élections Canada «Travailler à une élection fédérale». Découvrez le contenu de l'atelier, les activités et les outils disponibles pour vous aider à informer les membres de la communauté sur les opportunités rémunérées en tant que travailleurs électoraux lors des prochaines élections fédérales. 

# #À propos d'Élections Canada et du programme Inspirer la démocratie : 

Élections Canada a un programme appelé «Inspirer la démocratie» qui vise à réduire les obstacles à la participation électorale. Consultez le site web pour obtenir des informations sur la manière de surmonter ces obstacles, accéder à une série de trousses d'outils et trouver des liens vers des ressources pour soutenir l'engagement lors des élections fédérales. 

Ce webinaire aussi sera présenté en anglais le mardi, 29 octobre 2024. Cliquez ici pour plus de détails

# #Serie webinaire sur l'engagement civique

Il s'agit du premier webinaire sur le thème des élections et de l'engagement civique. Vous pourriez également être intéressé par :  

Details
Wednesday, October 30, 2024 - 16:45
12 h à 13 h
Cost: 
Gratuit
Event Type: 
Location
Webinaire

Beyond Elections: Promoting health and well-being through civic engagement

This webinar is presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities  

# About this Webinar

This panel presentation and discussion is for Alliance members and community partners that are interested in or already involved with civic engagement activities in their local communities. Through sharing examples and learning from their work, panelists will highlight: 

  • Civic engagement beyond federal elections  

  • Understanding and addressing barriers to engagement  

  • Planning considerations for civic engagement activities  

# Fostering a Culture of Civic Engagement 

By the Ottawa Coalition of Community Health and Resource Centres - Community Developers’ Network 

Speakers: 

  • Robynn Collins, Pinecrest-Queensway CHC 

  • Sado Ibrahim, Pinecrest-Queensway CHC 

  • Mohamed Aden, South-East Ottawa CHC 

#  Strengthening Communities: Volunteerism and Civic Engagement 

By The Neighbourhood Organization (TNO) and Flemingdon Health Centre (FHC

Speakers: 

  • Eshrat Meshkat, Flemingdon Health Centre 

  • Abdul Rashid Athar, Flemingdon Health Centre 

  • Karma Lhamo, The Neighbourhood Organization / Flemingdon Thorncliffe Inter-Agency Network Civic Engagement Cochair  

# Civic Engagement Webinar Series

This is the third of three webinars on the topic of elections and civic engagement. You may also be interested in: 

Details
Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Train-the-Trainer: Registering and Voting in a Federal Election

 

Presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities in collaboration with Elections Canada. 

# About the Webinar 

This train-the-trainer webinar is for Alliance members and community partners that are interested in delivering the Elections Canada workshop “Registering and Voting in a Federal Election”. Learn about the workshop content, activities, and tools available to support you in delivering this workshop for your local community to help them get ready for the next federal election.  

 This webinar is also being presented in French on Wednesday, October 30, 2024. Click here for more details

# About Elections Canada and the Inspire Democracy program 

Elections Canada has a program called Inspire Democracy with the goal of reducing barriers to electoral participation. Visit the website for information on addressing barriers, to access a series of toolkits, and for links to resources to support engagement in federal elections.  

# Civic Engagement Webinar Series

This is the second of three webinars on the topic of elections and civic engagement. You may also be interested in: 

 

 

Details
Tuesday, November 12, 2024 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Train-the-Trainer: Working at a Federal Election

Presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities in collaboration with Elections Canada. 

# Webinar Description 

This train-the-trainer webinar is for Alliance members and community partners that are interested in delivering the Elections Canada workshop “Working at a Federal Election”. Learn about the workshop content, activities, and tools available to support you in delivering this workshop to inform community members about paid opportunities as poll workers in the next federal election. 

This webinar is also being presented in French on Wednesday, October 30, 2024. Click here for more details

# About Elections Canada and the Inspire Democracy program 

Elections Canada has a program called Inspire Democracy with the goal of reducing barriers to electoral participation. Visit the website for information on addressing barriers, to access a series of toolkits, and for links to resources to support engagement in federal elections.  

#  Civic Engagement Webinar Series

This is the first of three webinars on the topic of elections and civic engagement. You may also be interested in: 

Details
Tuesday, October 29, 2024 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar