Alberta doctors vote to approve new contract with provincial government
CBC
Alberta doctors have voted 70 per cent in favour of a new contract that includes modest pay increases for three years, and promises to resolve outstanding conflicts later.
About 45 per cent of the province's physicians voted during the last two weeks on a complex proposal that is supposed to help recruit and retain more family doctors, especially in rural Alberta.
The agreement is a starting point to address challenges with how doctors are compensated, and how Alberta's health-care system is run, said Health Minister Jason Copping at a news conference Thursday in Red Deer.
"We need to act urgently to stabilize the system and address the pressures that have increased with the pandemic," he said. "And we need to plan for longer-term transformation."
As first reported by CBC News, the agreement will give doctors a lump-sum payment this fiscal year to acknowledge physicians' work during the last couple of years, and will increase their compensation rates one per cent per year for the next three years.
Meanwhile, a series of committees with doctor and government representatives will negotiate outstanding disagreements, including a review of all doctor billing codes and a daily cap that prevents doctors from seeing more than 65 patients.
"We have achieved an agreement that is good for physicians," Alberta Medical Association president Dr. Vesta Michelle Warren said on Thursday. "It's good for patients, and it's good for the health-care system that supports them."
The agreement commits the government to tabling legislation as soon as possible to repeal a power the United Conservative Party government gave itself to unilaterally terminate any master agreement with doctors.
In 2020, the government did just that, imposing a new agreement on the province's physicians and souring the relationship between the parties.
The parties previously tried, and failed, to negotiate and ink a new agreement in March 2021.
The Alberta Medical Association (AMA), which represents the province's 11,000 doctors, sued the government for what they say are breaches of their labour rights.
The new agreement says the AMA will rescind its lawsuit once the government amends the law.
Meanwhile, the UCP will select a new leader on Oct. 6, giving Alberta a new premier in one week.
The government says the agreement includes $252 million in new spending during the next four years, which works out to $59 million in annual funding and $16 million in one-time funding.