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THUNDER BAY – Members of CUPE joined striking Dilico Anishinabek Family Care workers on the picket line today in sounding an alarm bell about the impacts of provincial underfunding of child welfare.

We are here today to support our sisters and brothers at Dilico in their struggle for a fair contract”, said Marie Dean, president of CUPE Local 87 in Thunder Bay. “But this is not just a problem at Dilico, or here in the Thunder Bay area. This is a problem in every community across Ontario”, Dean added. “The failed austerity program of Kathleen Wynne’s Liberal government has created increased pressures on workers to do more with less and brought cuts to services in every community. We stand together with you in your fight for fairness and for quality services for your community.”
 
In Ontario’s child welfare sector, severe cuts to front-line services and programs that protect at-risk children and families and a resultant increase in labour instability are directly linked to systemic provincial underfunding. For this year alone, a $50.6 million provincial shortfall is forcing cuts to staff and increases in workloads across agencies, putting at risk the ability of agencies to meet their mandate to protect kids.

This situation of underfunding is especially challenging for aboriginal agencies like Dilico and Payukotayno: James and Hudson Bay Family Services, for example. Aboriginal agencies are suffering from insufficient resources for services. Insufficient resources mean impossible caseloads for workers. Governments cannot be seeking to shrink budgets at the expense of at-risk children and youth”, said Carrie Lynn Poole-Cotnam, the CUPE Ontario Chair of Social Services.

One of the central issues at Dilico is staff workload”, added Poole-Cotnam. “This is a direct result of the cuts to funding and the resultant cuts to staff that are happening at child welfare agencies right across the province. Agencies need a process to gauge the complexity of caseloads and ensure service levels are maintained, so that workers have the time to deal effectively with families and children in crisis. Government needs to invest in staff to ensure service levels are maintained.” 

This labour action should serve as a warning to Premier Kathleen Wynne. Unless adequate funding levels for agencies serving aboriginal communities are in place, and unless the province addresses workload issues across the sector, there will be more strikes like the one at Dilico.

For more information please contact:

Marie Dean, President, CUPE Local 87: 807-472-6729

Carrie Lynn Poole-Cotnam, CUPE Ontario Chair of Social Services: 613-864-1061

Barry Blake, CUPE Communications: 613-852-3279