Province to renew ambulance contract for 1 year, Greens say it should be renegotiated
CBC
The Official Opposition is calling on the province to renegotiate its contract for ambulance services across the Island as P.E.I.'s health minister confirms that contract will be renewed for one year.
The province's contract with Medavie Health Services, the company that runs ambulance services on P.E.I., began in 2006. On Tuesday, Health Minister Ernie Hudson said the contract is set to expire on March 31, at which point it will be renewed for one year.
Hudson confirmed the contract renewal following question period in the P.E.I. legislature, where the Opposition raised several concerns about staffing shortages and coverage issues within ambulance care on the Island. Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker said paramedics have been strained for some time, with staffing levels often leaving only one ambulance to serve the Island.
He referred to an incident last month when a man from western P.E.I. died after having a heart attack at his workplace while an ambulance took more than an hour to arrive from Summerside. Bevan-Baker said this is not an isolated incident and asked the health minister what his government was doing to stop it from happening again.
"Last week a personal friend of mine who also happens to live in Tignish and who also suffered a heart attack called me to say that they too had to wait an hour for an ambulance to arrive," he said.
Bevan-Baker said his friend is now recovering.
"This clearly shows that these are not isolated or unusual incidents," he said. "How much longer will Islanders' lives be put at risk as the result of a company that regardless of the statistics that they provide to you or to Islanders are clearly failing to provide adequate service?"
Speaking in the legislative chamber, Hudson said response times in those cases were too high and unacceptable.
"We do know that we need to make changes to ensure that response times are improved upon," Hudson said.
He said the province is committed to looking at ways to improve the situation on P.E.I. for both paramedics and Islanders in need of care and his department is open to ideas, specifically from the sector about how to do that.
"Everything is on the table, we need to look at ways to improve it, we need to look at meetings with our partners and having the discussions with them too and when I say partners I certainly mean paramedics," Hudson said.
Green MLA Michele Beaton also raised the issue in the chamber and later told reporters she's heard from several paramedics who say staffing levels are often at a critical level. One of the biggest issues when it comes to retaining staff is low wages, she said.
Beaton said she'd like to see the province renegotiate its contract with Medavie to address that challenge. She'd like government to push for higher wages for paramedics and also offer financial incentives to encourage paramedics to want to work and stay on P.E.I.
"We have the ability to negotiate a contract that puts people first, that treats Islanders with the respect that they deserve. If you work in the front line of health care you should be afforded a living wage, you should not be forced to work overtime or feel guilty for taking vacation," Beaton said.