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

Most abused yet lowest paid: developmental service workers at Bethesda Community Services have had enough

6 June 2024
Categories
  • English
  • Finance / Business
  • Government / Public Policy
  • Health / Safety
  • Media Release
Tags
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees
https://cupe.ca/

ST. CATHARINES, ON –(COMMUNITYWIRE)– There’s a little-known secret among organizations that support adults with developmental disabilities: not all clients are the same and agencies routinely shop their most challenging clients around.

Bethesda Community Services is known in the sector for taking the absolute hardest cases. Staff are routinely abused and harassed. Yet they have some of the lowest wages among all developmental service workers in the province.

“We work with the heaviest hitters, literally people that no one else will take on. They have behavioural challenges, multiple diagnoses, and histories of incarceration, trauma, or violence. They deserve care, but it can’t come at the expense and health of workers,” explains Heather Francey, a developmental support worker (DSW) with 15 years’ experience and president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 2977. “No worker should leave a shift with bite marks or a concussion but that is happening regularly simply because our agency is not staffing properly.”

Tired of abuse from clients and neglect from management, a supermajority of members from CUPE 2977 – representing more than 250 DSWs, recreation, maintenance, and cleaning staff at Vineland locations of Bethesda Community Services – signed a petition demanding a fair deal. For years workers have left Bethesda Community Services for jobs with higher wages and less abuse. That’s left the agency chronically short staffed with workers often forced into unsafe, 1-on-1 situations with aggressive clients.

“The hypocrisy is almost as bad as the violence. This year, CEO Paul McGowan gleefully accepted a safety award. He knows as well as we do that workers and clients cannot be safe if we don’t staff properly,” said Francey. “That’s what we’re bargaining for. We want our agency to be the kind of place where workers can be safe and proud.”

Representatives from CUPE 2977 entered negotiations in March with a focus on addressing the morale and retention challenges by bringing their wages in line with other agencies. Workers are being forced to take second or third jobs; others are turning to food banks to get by. Despite the pressing need, management is demanding cuts to mental health supports while trying to force more full-time workers to stretch themselves thin working three weekends a month.

75 per cent of members signed the open letter addressed to the Board of Directors which was delivered today in advance of the two sides returning to the table for their final scheduled date of negotiations. This effort comes amidst a roiling sector where developmental service workers across the province have been organizing and demanding better treatment, notably with a month-long strike by neighbouring workers at Community Living Port Colborne-Wainfleet.

-30-

For more information, contact: 

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

Share
ENGLISH
FRANÇAIS

Submit Your News

EVENTS CALENDAR

  • MEDIA ADVISORY: TODAY: CUPE members and allies rally at Minister of Labour Paddy Hajdu’s Office: Stop the attack on workers!
    18 August 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    CORRECTING AND REPLACING CUPE’S MEDIA ADVISORY: “Nursing ratios save lives:” new study recommends Ontario government mandate safe nurse staffing levels in hospitals
    14 August 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: “Nursing ratios save lives:” new study recommends Ontario government mandate safe nurse staffing levels in hospitals
    14 August 2025

RECENT RELEASES

  • La Calgary Immigrant Women’s Association remporte le Prix de l’innovation en littératie de la Canada Vie
    21 August 2025
  • Calgary Immigrant Women’s Association wins top place in the Canada Life Literacy Innovation Award
    21 August 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Nurse-to-patient ratios save lives and reduce staff burnout, says new academic study
    19 August 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Nurse-to-patient ratios save lives and reduce staff burnout, says new academic study
    19 August 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Nurse-to-patient ratios save lives and reduce staff burnout, says new academic study
    18 August 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.