Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. health support workers have tentative deal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2023 06:03 PM
  • B.C. health support workers have tentative deal

VICTORIA - Thousands of health-care support workers in British Columbia have a tentative contract agreement after a year of talks.

The BC General Employees' Union and Health Employers Association announced the agreement Monday, saying it was reached early Sunday morning.

The contract covers 21,700 people who work in private homes, group homes, residential living centres, child development, mental-health centres and other programs around B.C.

The union says in a statement the deal represents substantial gains that workers had identified, such as significant wage increases, protecting workers’ benefits and greater control over working conditions.

Full details of the contract won't be released until after the ratification vote, but the union says it's a three-year term with general wage increases in each year, and contains a clause for low-wage redress for some workers.

The BCGEU represents about 13,000 of the workers under the contract, while representatives of other unions, including Hospital Employees, CUPE, Health Sciences Association and BC Nurses Union, were also at the negotiation table.

MORE National ARTICLES

Omicron cousin BA.5 expected to dominate summer

Omicron cousin BA.5 expected to dominate summer
Modelling expert Sarah Otto of the Coronavirus Variants Rapid Response Network says the fast-spreading subvariant is on track to dominate infections across the country.  The University of British Columbia professor predicted a July wave, peaking in August.

Omicron cousin BA.5 expected to dominate summer

Canadians urged to prepare for fall COVID-19 vax

Canadians urged to prepare for fall COVID-19 vax
Canada's chief public health officer Theresa Tam says circulating Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 are even more transmissible and able to evade immunity than previous versions, making a rise in cases likely in coming weeks.

Canadians urged to prepare for fall COVID-19 vax

Nutrition labels to go on front of food packages

Nutrition labels to go on front of food packages
The policy, more than five years in the making, will clearly label products with the so-called "nutrients of public health concern" that have been linked to conditions such as cardiovascular disease and Type 2 diabetes.

Nutrition labels to go on front of food packages

Monkeypox cases reach 278 in Canada

Monkeypox cases reach 278 in Canada
Chief public health officer Theresa Tam says there are "continuing discussions and contract negotiations" to obtain doses from Bavarian Nordic, the Danish manufacturer of a smallpox vaccine approved for use against monkeypox.

Monkeypox cases reach 278 in Canada

'Sense of future' for Lytton residents in rebuild

'Sense of future' for Lytton residents in rebuild
Mike Farnworth says that would give displaced residents returning home a sense of their future after 90 per cent of their village burned to the ground last June 30 during a record-setting heat wave.

'Sense of future' for Lytton residents in rebuild

New clean fuel rules will hike price of gas

New clean fuel rules will hike price of gas
An impact analysis of the Clean Fuel Regulations published Wednesday estimates they will cut about 18 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions in 2030, or five to six per cent of what Canada needs to eliminate to meet its current targets for that year.

New clean fuel rules will hike price of gas