• Place an order, or for other inquiries:
  • 416-923-3567 ext. 3325
  • content@newsmediacanada.ca
CommunityWireCommunityWireCommunityWireCommunityWire
  • Home
  • Why CommunityWire
  • How It Works
  • Services & Rates
✕

Deficits, burnout, and now a strike at Ottawa CAS are signs of what’s to come in Hamilton

29 July 2024
Categories
  • English
  • Families / Parenting / Children
  • Finance / Business
  • Government / Public Policy
  • Health / Safety
  • Media Release
Tags
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees
https://cupe.ca/

HAMILTON, ON –(COMMUNITYWIRE)– Child protection workers have never faced a crisis like the one they are currently in, with workers crying in their cars, on stress leave, or terrified that a lack of resources will lead to a child’s death. This explains the current strike at the Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa – but it also describes what workers are experiencing at Hamilton Child and Family Supports (HFCS).

“We look at what they’re facing in Ottawa and it’s a mirror of our experiences. We are the last line of protection for children. What does it say about our government’s values if those tasked with keeping children safe deal with chronic stress and not enough resources to do their jobs?” said Shannon King, a frontline protection worker and president of the CUPE 5300 representing roughly 190 workers at HCFS. In the last 18 months, HFCS laid off 19 frontline protection workers and refused to replace four others who left. “There’s no one else to cut. And it means that every worker who is still here is carrying a much higher burden while families get less support,” said King.

Last week, members of CUPE 5300 donated coffee and donuts to the picket line in Ottawa and $1,500 to their strike fund as a show of solidarity. Along with the donation, they are issuing a warning to Hamilton families and policy makers that they will be in the same position, desperately fighting for more resources, when bargaining begins in 2025.

For years, the mandate of child protection agencies has shifted from bringing children into care to supporting them in their communities. This is a laudable goal – but the shift has meant that when workers do need to remove a child for their own safety, the resources to do so are not there.

“Best case scenario is always to keep a child with their family, kin, or community. But we don’t live in the best case scenario. We have to protect against the worst. Placement is a last resort, but it’s crucial to keep children safe,” said King. “Right now we’re keeping children in unsafe situations not because it’s what’s best for them but because we don’t have the resources to do anything else. We are dozens of workers and beds short of truly being able to meet our community’s needs and that is what’s at stake in the next round of bargaining.”

A June report from the Financial Accountability Office laid bare that the Ford government is underspending on their own commitments to social services by a shocking $3.7 billion.

“This government has the money, they just don’t seem to care. Their message to workers and families is to find solutions that are safe enough but an encampment or a family members home without proper supervision is never safe enough for a child,” said Monique Taylor, NDP MPP and critic for Children, Community and Social Services. “We know this government has the resources to support both workers and families, to help both live their best lives. But when it comes to this government, it will never be their concern. Our community deserves to be a priority. They deserve better.”

-30-

For more information, please contact:

Jesse Mintz, CUPE Communications
416-704-9642
jmintz@cupe.ca

Share
ENGLISH
FRANÇAIS

Submit Your News

EVENTS CALENDAR

  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: Five years into Ford government’s privatization of hospital services: longer wait-times, unequal access, and public opposition
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: Five years into Ford government’s privatization of hospital services: longer wait-times, unequal access, and public opposition
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: 78 per cent of people in Western Ontario want provincial government to prioritize spending on public hospitals instead of private clinics: new poll
    11 June 2025

RECENT RELEASES

  • CUPE members at Bruce Telecom could take strike action
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in Waterloo Region face reduced access to privatized hospital services: new report
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in London face reduced access to privatized hospital services: new report
    13 June 2025
  • UCDSB education workers will not back down!: CUPE education workers push back after UCDSB management tries to silence petition
    10 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in Cornwall face reduced access to privatized hospital services
    10 June 2025

CATEGORIES

Be seen where the audience is looking
News Media Canada
2-610 Ford Dr., #218
Oakville, Ontario L6J 7W4

416-923-3567 or toll-free 1-877-305-2262
content@newsmediacanada.ca

© Copyright 2024 News Media Canada. All rights reserved.