Tuesday, April 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Nurses Approve New Collective Agreement With Pay Increase, Workload Changes

IANS, 26 Jan, 2019 02:43 AM

    VICTORIA — Nurses in British Columbia will get a two per cent annual wage increase in a new three-year collective agreement.


    Details of the deal between the Nurses' Bargaining Association and the Health Employers' Association of B.C. also include wage premiums if employers don't meet staffing levels they have agreed to.


    Starting on April 1, 2020, nurses will receive an additional $5 an hour if they are working short on a unit, department or program with 10 or fewer scheduled nurses.


    There are other premiums as well for nurses who work in units that are understaffed and for those who agree to work a shift on short notice.


    The agreement takes effect April 1 and expires March 31, 2022.


    The BC Nurses' Union says 54 per cent of the more than 21,000 ballots cast in a ratification vote supported the agreement, which was reached in November.


    "I believe we have negotiated an innovative contract that will make a positive impact on the working lives of our members and the patients in their care," union president Christine Sorensen said in a statement on Friday. "However, nurses have sent a clear message to the government that they are skeptical real change will come."


    The union says a provincewide survey in 2017 showed staffing and workload were the biggest concerns for nurses in contract negotiations.


    "Unsustainable workload coupled with a systemic nursing shortage has a direct impact on a nurse's ability to provide safe patient care. Our members have spoken," Sorensen said. "While more needs to be done, this contract is a step in the right direction."


    The Nurses' Bargaining Association represents about 44,000 registered, psychiatric and licensed practical nurses in B.C.


    The agreement also provides community nurses with improved mileage expenses.


    As well, nurses will be paid for previously unpaid work at the ends of their shifts when they provide information to those replacing them.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted
    The Trudeau government is scrapping an unpopular lottery system for immigrants looking to reunite with their parents and grandparents and is increasing the number of sponsorship applications it will accept next year.

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted

    Anti-Pipeline Protesters Released Days Before Weeklong Jail Sentences End

    MAPLE RIDGE, B.C. — Several pipeline protesters were released from a British Columbia jail on Sunday, a few days before their weeklong sentences were set to end.

    Anti-Pipeline Protesters Released Days Before Weeklong Jail Sentences End

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada
    Metro Vancouver announced Sunday it would continue a previous air quality advisory because of the high levels of fine particulate matter, which doctors say can be absorbed into the blood stream and lungs, causing exhaustion and confusion.

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa
    Police say a seven-year-old girl whose body was found at an apartment complex in Langley, B.C., is the victim of a homicide. Her mother has been charged in the murder.

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death
    Video posted to twitter shows first responders performing chest compressions on a person lying on the sidewalk at the McDonald's on 96 Avenue and Prince Charles Boulevard at around 9 p.m.

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death

    Parts Of Northern B.C. Asked To Restrict Water Use As Drought Level Raised

    People in parts of northern British Columbia are being asked to voluntarily reduce water consumption because it has been warm and dry.

    Parts Of Northern B.C. Asked To Restrict Water Use As Drought Level Raised