Warning message

Please note that this page is from our archives. There may be more up-to-date content about this topic on our website. Use our search engine to find out.

The government has got to stop ignoring this critical situation,” says CUPE 873 president John Strohmaier.  “Members are getting increasingly frustrated by the government’s unwillingness to take action to fix our broken ambulance system.”

Because the T-shirts are not official ambulance garb, CUPE 873 members hope that they will help draw attention to the strike that is now over 100 days long.
Over the weekend, Sue Conroy, chief operating officer of the BC Ambulance Service, sent a memo to all staff threatening discipline, up to and including suspension, for any ambulance paramedic wearing the T-shirt on the job.
Despite this threat, paramedics are still wearing the T-shirts.
“It’s really pathetic that, during a staffing crisis, the employer would consider sending someone home just for wearing a T-shirt,” says B.J. Chute, director of Public Education for CUPE 873.
Ambulance paramedics have been on strike since April 1.  They want the government to negotiate so that improvements can be made to how services are delivered.  Chronic understaffing and long response times continue to be the biggest issues paramedics want the government to address.

Contact:  BJ Chute, Director of Public Education, Ambulance Paramedics of BC: 604.218.6169
       Dan Gawthrop, CUPE Communications Representative: 604-454-7293