Maples Personal Care Home employees ratify tentative agreement

Winnipeg – Employees at Maples Personal Care Home (PCH) in Winnipeg represented by CUPE Local 2719 ratified a new collective agreement on Wednesday, July 31st.

A 94% strike mandate was achieved on June 28th, followed by four days of information pickets and meetings with a provincial conciliation officer. These information pickets drew over a hundred supporters, including CUPE members from across Manitoba.

CUPE National Representative Paula Raposo says, “The bargaining committee worked extremely hard to achieve a fair contract, we are proud of their accomplishments throughout this difficult round of bargaining”.

The primary outstanding issues included wage parity with other personal care homes operated by Revera, as well as addressing the ongoing issue of working “short-staffed”.

Members of CUPE Local 2719 care very deeply about the quality of care they provide to the residents of Maples PCH. Throughout negotiations members have been calling on the employer to provide adequate staffing levels in the facility.

The employer agreed to a Letter of Understanding, establishing a committee to monitor and assess staffing levels in the facility, as well as a commitment to ensure full staffing no later than October 1st.

“Long-term care employees province-wide have raised concerns that there is not enough staffing in Manitoba’s personal care homes” said Raposo. “At Maples they are consistently working short staffed, in addition to being underpaid for years – we are hopeful that this agreement will bridge the wage gap, and address the staffing issue seriously.”

CUPE Local 2719 represents 130 health care aides, dietary aides, recreation facilitators, and cooks at Maples Personal Care Home.

Maples Personal Care Home Employees Vote to Strike

Winnipeg – An overwhelming majority (94%) of employees at Maples Personal Care Home voted in favour of a strike mandate in a vote conducted on Friday, June 28th.

These employees include health care aides, dietary aides and kitchen staff. Bargaining reached a stalemate over fair wages and employees calling for increased staffing in the personal care home.

“We are often working short-staffed” states Virginia Monton, President of CUPE Local 2719, “this means that we are unable to safely do our jobs”. Working short staffed occurs when there are not enough health care aides per shift to adequately care for all residents. This leads to employees struggling to fill the gap in the workload and can lead to stress, additional sick time and an unsafe work environment.

“Our members care very deeply for the residents at Maples Personal Care Home” states Paula Raposo, CUPE National Representative, “we want to ensure that every resident receives the level of care and attention they deserve”.

In addition to the staffing levels, CUPE members are calling for a fair wage increase to bring them up to similar levels found at other personal care homes operated by Revera.
On July 18th, the parties will meet with a Conciliation Officer to work towards addressing these important issues.

The tentative strike date is set for July 22nd.

What is “Working Short”?

CUPE Local 2719 is working hard to make sure our members receive the support they need to do their jobs.

Ensuring that there is enough staff at Maples means that our members can provide excellent care for residents, while at the same time ensuring that staff are not over-worked, stressed, or forced to take on more work than they can handle.

See the below handout for more information on Working Short.

Download (PDF, 1.09MB)