Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

BC midwives and Province agree on 3 year wage increasing agreement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2023 01:53 PM
  • BC midwives and Province agree on 3 year wage increasing agreement

British Columbia midwives and the province have ratified a new three-year, wage-increasing agreement with the overwhelming support of health-care workers.

The new deal includes a series of fee increases and measures that the province says will provide more supports for Indigenous midwifery.

A vote among members of the Midwives Association of British Columbia on July 31 garnered 99 per cent support for the agreement, with 89 per cent of eligible association members taking part in the ballot.

The agreement is effective retroactively from April 2022 until March 2025.

Fees increase by 3.24 per cent, 6.75 per cent, and two per cent over the course of the deal.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says the agreement "will be transformative in helping grow the profession."

Lehe Spiegelman, co-chair of the midwives association, says in a news release that the deal will allow midwives to focus on maternity care in B.C., which she says has the highest rate of midwifery-involved births in the country.

MORE National ARTICLES

More rain for parts of drought-stricken B.C.

More rain for parts of drought-stricken B.C.
Rain is predicted to be even heavier on the west coast of Vancouver Island, where about 80 mm could fall in less than 36 hours and models show some Metro Vancouver communities may receive 60 mm or more.

More rain for parts of drought-stricken B.C.

Mayor's lawyer suggests client treated unfairly

Mayor's lawyer suggests client treated unfairly
Richard Peck is questioning the primary investigator at McCallum's provincial court mischief trial and says police couldn't tell in surveillance video if the mayor's foot had been injured by a woman driving a vehicle.

Mayor's lawyer suggests client treated unfairly

Dozens of recommendations in B.C. overdose report

Dozens of recommendations in B.C. overdose report
The more than three dozen recommendations include ensuring continuity of care for at-risk people, expanding a take-home naloxone program, and engaging with health-care providers to reduce barriers in prescribing a safe supply of drugs.

Dozens of recommendations in B.C. overdose report

VPD identifies 10 most wanted from Breakout Festival riot

VPD identifies 10 most wanted from Breakout Festival riot
Vandals caused more than $300,000 damage to the PNE on September 18, after the last-minute cancellation of a headline act at the Breakout Festival. Dozens of concert-goers destroyed food kiosks, overturned tables, climbed light fixtures, and sparked fights throughout the PNE grounds and surrounding neighbourhoods.

VPD identifies 10 most wanted from Breakout Festival riot

Report says Canada exploiting Indian students for 'cheap labour'

Report says Canada exploiting Indian students for 'cheap labour'
According to the report, PM Justin Trudeau's government introduced the permit extension move to over 5,00,000 international students already in Canada to potentially work more hours, and stay for 18 months after graduation to seek employment. However, after more than a year, some of these permanent-resident hopefuls have been left without status to work or remain in the country.

Report says Canada exploiting Indian students for 'cheap labour'

Macklem to appear before Senate banking committee

Macklem to appear before Senate banking committee
The Bank of Canada hiked its key interest rate by half a percentage point on Wednesday and signalled interest rates would have to rise further to clamp down on decades-high inflation. Canada’s annual inflation rate was 6.9 per cent in September but has been steadily declining since reaching its highest rate this year of 8.1 per cent in June.

Macklem to appear before Senate banking committee