British Columbia

Tentative contract reached for thousands of health support workers in B.C.

Thousands of health-care support workers in British Columbia have a tentative contract agreement after a year of talks.

Contract covers workers in private homes, group homes, residential living centres, other programs around B.C.

A blue sign with the dogwood flower in the left corner and the words BCGEU and below it B.C. Government and Service Employees' Union rests on a concrete pedestal.
The BCGEU said in a statement the deal represents substantial gains that workers had identified, including significant wage increases, the protection of workers' benefits and greater control over working conditions. (BCGEU)

Thousands of health-care support workers in British Columbia have a tentative contract agreement after a year of talks.

The B.C. General Employees' Union and Health Employers Association announced the agreement Monday, saying it was reached early Sunday morning.

The contract covers 21,700 people who work in private homes, group homes, residential living centres, child development, mental health centres and other programs around B.C.

The union says in a statement the deal represents substantial gains that workers had identified, such as significant wage increases, protecting workers' benefits and greater control over working conditions.

Full details of the contract won't be released until after the ratification vote, but the union says it's a three-year term with general wage increases in each year and contains a clause for low-wage redress for some workers.

The BCGEU represents about 13,000 of the workers under the contract, while representatives of other unions, including the Hospital Employees, CUPE, the Health Sciences Association and the B.C. Nurses' Union were also at the negotiation table.