Wednesday, March 02, 2022


Nfld. & Labrador

Nurses' union, N.L. government team up to address staffing shortages

'We have reached a pivotal time in nursing in our province and across the country,' says union president

Furey says he wants to ensure there's a collaborative approach to closing gaps in the health-care system. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

The government of Newfoundland and Labrador says it's looking outside Canada address the province's nursing shortage.

Yvette Coffey, president of the Registered Nurses' Union Newfoundland and Labrador, said Tuesday that nurses and nurse practitioners have reported high rates of burnout and mental health deterioration over the course of the pandemic due to workloads and short staffs.

"We have reached a pivotal time in nursing in our province and across the country," said Coffey at a news conference Tuesday with the premier and provincial health minister. "Across the country and around the world some nurses are making the heart-wrenching decision to leave nursing all together or to retire early due to the conditions they face."

The provincial government is ushering in a $420,000 bursary program to attract internationally educated nurses to a bridging program offered by the Centre for Nursing Studies. Forty-two spots are available and the program takes 12-18 months to complete, followed by a four-month on-site practical component. 

The program will allow nurses to address any requirement gaps for Canadian nursing credentials not covered by their international training.

But there are more than 600 vacant registered nursing positions across the province right now, Coffey said, making the bursary program a small part of the solution.

Finding solutions

Early next month, the provincial government is hosting a virtual think tank to consult the province's registered nurses and come up with a plan to address challenges facing the profession.

The goal is to find short-term measures to improve the workplace and the retention and recruitment of registered nurses and nurse practitioners in Newfoundland and Labrador. The provincial government is also gathering information for a report that will be used as the basis for recommendations for the new recruitment and retention office for health-care professionals.

From left, Registered Nurses' Union Newfoundland and Labrador president Yvette Coffey, Furey and provincial Health Minister John Haggie on Tuesday outlined steps they're taking to address the province's nursing shortage. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

"Collaboration is what's needed to turn the tide for nursing in Newfoundland and Labrador," Coffey said. 

"For the first time ever our province will have a government office dedicated to the recruitment and retention of health-care professionals. We look forward to working with officials from this office to continue efforts to create healthier workplaces, address violence in health care and stabilize the work force." 

The province is also issuing three requests for proposals this week to dig into the challenges of the nursing workforce. 

One will focus on understanding the shift in the workforce including the inability to fill permanent positions. Another looks to develop a health and human resources plan to ensure the province is providing appropriate care for residents.

The final request for proposals is for a nursing core staff review to analyze core staffing methods and provide recommendations for improvement. 

"As a government and as a former surgeon I understand the issues that nurses face. I've worked side by side, arm in arm with nurses every day of my life," said Premier Andrew Furey on Tuesday. 

"I understand that the system was broken before the pandemic. There has been a huge exposure of gaps because of the pandemic, and I want to make sure that we're working collaboratively to ensure that we're closing those gaps."

The PC opposition says it welcomes the steps the provincial government but criticized the timing of Tuesday's announcement.

In a media release, PC Leader David Brazil noted the Liberal government already announced the request for proposals for the human resources plan in October and committed to a nursing core staffing review in 2019.

"Health-care recruiters from elsewhere in Canada continue to attract our health-care professionals elsewhere. Now there's another plan to make a plan. Patients need action today," Brazil said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Jeremy Eaton

Pierre Poilievre offers right-wing populism to the Conservatives.
Will they take him up on it?
  Pierre Poilievre offers right-wing populism to the Conservatives. Will they take him up on it?

Canada’s Conservative party is changing. The question is whether it goes down a right-wing populist path — as Republicans south of the border have with Donald Trump — or whether it takes a centrist approach to appeal to a wider audience. In many ways, that question reveals the cracks in the nearly 20-year-old marriage of convenience between the Progressive Conservatives and the Canadian Alliance, one that risks ending up in a nasty divorce.

The only declared candidate, Carleton MP Pierre Poilievre, is a polarizing figure with a “take no prisoners” attitude. He recently called Europe’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine shockingly “weak,” embraced the so-called “Freedom Convoy,” and called COVID-19 public health measures a purposeful attempt by governments “to try and take away our freedom and give themselves more power.”

In the past, Poilievre has attacked the media, made derogatory comments about Indigenous peoplesleft the door open to a niqab ban in the public service, and broken the election law. Elected at age 25, the career MP is a forceful opposition critic who has railed against elites, placed the blame for rising inflation and house prices at the feet of the Liberals, and promised more energy projects. His campaign launch through a social media video on Feb. 5 garnered more than seven million views on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. At least 26 Conservative caucus members have endorsed him.

Those who haven’t hope for a more mature candidate with a unifying message.

That’s what former Quebec premier Jean Charest, Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown and political commentator Tasha Kheiriddin want to offer. All three are current outsiders, and all hail from the Progressive Conservative side of the party.

Charest started his political career in 1984 under prime minister Brian Mulroney. He will meet with Conservative MPs — most of whom know little about him — on Wednesday in Ottawa. On Monday, Quebec’s anti-corruption unit (UPAC) ended its eight-year probe into allegations the Quebec Liberal party engaged in illegal financing when Charest was at the helm. It’s a welcome gift that clears the way for his candidacy.

Not that it will be a walk in the park. Jenni Byrne, Poilievre’s strategist, laid out the attacks against Charest on Twitter, describing him as a “Liberal who campaigned against [prime minister] Stephen Harper,” “supported the long-gun registry, raised taxes, brought in a carbon tax & worked for Huawei while the Chinese Govt detained kidnapped Canadians.” Her offensive led to an ugly public dispute on Sunday with Charest organizer and Tory MP Alain Rayes.

Brown, a vocal opponent of Quebec’s Bill 21, was a Conservative MP from 2006 until 2015, when he became leader of the Ontario PCs. Before resigning over allegations of sexual misconduct, which he strenuously denies, he sought to expand the Ontario party’s tent by supporting carbon pricing and reaching out to ethnic communities.

Kheiriddin has never held elected office, but she is well known, bilingual, and has no baggage.

Their decisions about whether to enter the leadership contest depend on the rules of the game — which could be announced as early as Wednesday. Poilievre’s camp wants a June vote and a membership cut-off of mid-May, sources said, giving any opponents little time to organize. His challengers would benefit from a longer race, with more time to sell memberships to newcomers and more time to be heard by existing members.

Charest and Brown will likely need to change the current makeup of the party — around 200,000 members — if they are to succeed. The Tories pick leaders through a weighted ranked ballot, in which every riding with more than 100 members is worth 100 points. Unless Poilievre were to win a majority on the first round, a race that includes Charest, Brown and Kheiriddin could see any of them benefit from each other’s supporters.

Poilievre is already courting down-ballot support from social conservative favourite Leslyn Lewis, the Conservative MP for Haldimand—Norfolk. Independent York Centre MPP Roman Baber, a staunch opponent of COVID-19 restrictions, is also contemplating a run.

Back in 2017, Andrew Scheer was elected leader as the compromise candidate, supported by social conservatives, Quebec dairy farmers and members who didn’t trust Maxime Bernier. In 2020, Erin O’Toole was also the compromise candidate, acceptable to social conservatives, and less centrist than Peter MacKay. In 2022, Poilievre is modelling himself as that candidate. But it’s unclear that the parts of the party he’s already alienated — namely the Quebec branch and those uncomfortable with his courtship of People’s Party supporters — will be willing to unite behind him once this race is over.

In choosing a leader, the Conservatives must ask themselves what their winning formula will be —do they want to take votes from Bernier’s far-right party or from Justin Trudeau’s Liberals?


Althia Raj is an Ottawa-based national politics columnist for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @althiaraj