Ontario
October 8 Day of Action on Long-Term Care All Out to Uphold the Rights of Seniors and Their Caregivers
- Steve Rutchinski -
The Ontario Day of Action on Long-Term Care (LTC) organized
by the Ontario Health Coalition, frontline care and senior advocacy
organizations is being held on Thursday, October 8 to demand improved
care in LTC facilities and an end to for-profit privatized LTC.
Nineteen cities have now announced a total of 21 events. In Toronto,
the car cavalcade will start at 9:30 am at Queen's Park and an online
press conference will be held at 9:45 am. For all other locations and
start times see the Calendar of Events above. Many
things have been revealed about our society as a result of the COVID
pandemic, things which make it impossible for any thinking person to
want a return to the old normal. And as Canada moves into a second
wave, one of the things that stands out is the irrationality of how
this situation is being dealt with. Who would ever
imagine that the same for-profit LTC monopolies, responsible for so
many deaths of seniors and frontline health care workers, would be
rewarded with more money from the government, in our name, to fix
things they haven't fixed in more than two decades? Who
would imagine that seven months into this pandemic, testing and
tracking possible transmissions would be in such disarray; that health
care workers still do not have adequate personal protective equipment;
that schools would be reopened without measures taken for physical
distancing in the classroom or the transportation of students to and
from schools? Or that hospitals would be laying off nursing staff to
balance their budgets! To any thinking person this
is irrationality! How is it that frontline health care workers who have
given their all, become the target of orders-in-council and ministerial
decrees overriding their rights and their collective agreements? How is
it that migrant workers, foreign students and others are recognized as
doing work that is essential to the functioning of Canadian society but
are denied status and rights here? How is it that standards of care for
seniors advocated by registered nurses and other frontline care givers
are simply ignored; or that courts and quasi-judicial bodies can
outright dismiss appeals by teachers' and educators' unions for
governments to implement in our schools the standards set by public
health departments? All of this is to keep working
people from being involved in making the decisions that affect their
lives; to silence the repudiation of the neo-liberal, privatization and
pay-the-rich schemes that disarmed society and set the stage for what
is now taking place. As the second
wave unfolds, government authorities shamelessly blame the people for
being too lax about maintaining safe "bubbles"; blame the youth for
having parties and so on. Not one will acknowledge it might have
something to do with people going back to work because to do so would
be to acknowledge that contact at work may be a factor and that would
open the door to compensation claims. Not one will acknowledge that
getting to and from work on public transit might be a factor; that
busing children to school by the "old normal" standards; or refusing to
cap class sizes at reasonable numbers might be a factor. Such
measures all require public investment -- not handouts to the rich.
They require mobilizing the active participation of the polity in
solving these problems. But the public authority clearly has not put
full weight of the society and its resources behind keeping people safe
and sorting out the issues of safely starting up, within the conditions
of a pandemic. The COVID pandemic has indeed revealed many things --
one of the most important being the need for a credible public
authority.
All Out for the Ontario Day of Action
for Long-Term Care! Fight for the Rights of Our Seniors and
Frontline Caregivers!
This article was published in
Number 67 - October 6, 2020
Article Link:
Ontario
October 8 Day of Action on Long-Term Care: All Out to Uphold the Rights of Seniors and Their Caregivers - Steve Rutchinski
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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