Sask. nurses frustrated by short-staffing, budget cuts

RNs in the province have been without a contract since March 31, 2014

Image | registered-nurses-SUN-saskatoon-prairieland-meeting

Caption: Outside a meeting today at Prairieland Park, Saskatchewan Union of Nurses members expressed frustration with staffing levels inside acute care facilities, saying recent cuts hurt patients. (CBC)

White nursing scrubs filled a meeting room at Prairieland Park today, as roughly 600 registered nurses met to vent, and to discuss their union's next move.
Last week, the Saskatchewan Union of Nurses (SUN) broke off contract talks with the Saskatchewan Association of Health Organizations (SAHO). On Monday, the province appointed Calgary-based mediator Richard Hornung, to bring both sides back to the bargaining table.
At Hornung's request, today's meeting was closed to the public.

Frustration over short-staffing, cuts

Outside Wednesday's meeting, some nurses expressed frustration over short-staffing and budget cuts inside acute-care facilities over the past two years.
"I go home in tears because I've felt I haven't provided my patients the care that they deserve," said Gwen Kessler, who has spent the past 25 years working as a RN in Saskatoon.
"I can't do it all and that's because of staffing cuts, because of poor patient ratios," she said.

Image | Quincy-Lamb-nurse-Saskatoon

Caption: Quincy Lamb, an acute care nurse in Saskatoon, said cuts have made it nearly "impossible" for registered nurses to provide adequate patient care. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

Her concerns were echoed by Quincy Lamb, an acute care nurse from Saskatoon with eight years of experience.
"It's impossible to provide safe patient care and to be as thorough as you want to," said Lamb.
She noted she's had to care for up to ten acute care patients at once. Once that happens, Lamb said care devolves into "the basics of just making sure people are alive."
"That is not the health care system we should have in Canada at all," she said.

Mediator says both sides want an agreement

Hornung said he held a conference call with officials from both SUN and SAHO yesterday.
"I was quite pleased with the attitude displayed by the parties on both sides and their desire to come to an agreement," he said Wednesday afternoon.
"We've had quite productive discussions, from which I take considerable heart," he added.
Hornung said the provincial election on April 4 will have "nothing to do" with the negotiations, which may continue during the campaign.
"I can tell you this, the election will have absolutely nothing to do, if I have my say and I have a lot of say, on how this mediation plays out. None," said Hornung.

Nurses say patient safety at stake

Several nurses in the hallways told CBC that budget cuts and staffing shortages, as a result of LEAN-related reforms, are a far bigger concern for their patients.

Image | Gwen-Kessler-Saskatoon-nurse

Caption: Gwen Kessler has spent 25 years nursing acute care patients in Saskatoon. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

"It's not pleasant to fight, but I've been through this in the '90s," Kessler said. "This makes me angry and it makes me sad."
She said for her, the dispute is not about wages.
"I think we have the ability to tell our government they need to wake up," she said. "This is not about self-preservation, this is about staying united and this is about looking after the residents of this province."
Both sides have agreed to meet again on Friday.
SUN represents roughly 10,000 registered nurses across Saskatchewan. Its members last went on strike in 1999.
Corrections:
  • An earlier version incorrectly stated the date of the provincial election. It will be held on April 4. February 25, 2016 8:00 AM