Posts Tagged ‘contract’

Contract talks too slow: N.L. doctors

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

p Brendan Lewis, wrote his colleagues. 30. Given this circumstance, it is unlikely that we will be able to conclude a new agreement before the current memorandum of agreement expires. The medical association outlines 11 essential elements it says must be part of a new deal. Dr. Brendan Lewis is president of the Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association. The doctors want compensation that would put them in the top 25 per cent of what physicians !–more– are paid in Atlantic Canada. The leader of Newfoundland and Labrador’s doctors says their contract with the province will likely expire this month before a new one is negotiated. Doctors say that kind of deal can’t happen again. Talks began with officials from Treasury Board and Health in April, but the frequency and pace of our face-to-face discussions with government has been much slower than we would have liked, wrote Lewis. The list was given to the government on May 22. Doctors are seeking pay increases to ensure the province will attract and keep more physicians. The medical association says pay should be more competitive with physicians’ wages in other parts of the country. Newfoundland and Labrador’s doctors are among the lowest-paid in Canada. The current four-year deal, which started with a two-year pay freeze, expires Sept. Last spring, CBC obtained a document outlining what Newfoundland and Labrador’s more than 1,000 doctors were looking for in negotiations. But CBC News has obtained a letter that Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association’s president, Dr. In their last contract, doctors accepted a two-year wage freeze, followed by increases of three per cent in each of the next two years. The association that represents the province’s doctors says it won’t speak publicly about negotiations.
Reached by phone, an NLMA official told CBC news it’s not unusual for the doctors’ contract to expire before a new agreement is reached.

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Another untendered contract surfaces at embattled eHealth Ontario

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

p Interim Progressive Conservative Leader Bob Runciman responded: By not taking action, the minister has condoned this offensive abuse of taxpayer dollars. Several consultants have left the provincial agency, eHealth Ontario, since it become embroiled in questions over spending and employment practices. Alan Hudson and a consulting firm that was granted about $2 million in untendered contracts. The provincial agency has also appointed an outside !–more– professional services company, PricewaterhouseCoopers, to probe its employment and spending practices. Either one could have done the job under existing rules on contract tenders. In recent years, SSHA was blasted for its high percentage of spending on consultants, lack of strategic plan and poor reputation in the health-care community. The agency had begun cleaning up and moving away from its dependence on consultants, but McGuinty’s Liberal government quietly folded the agency into newly created eHealth Ontario last September. Courtyard later got $1 million in contracts under Kramer. CBC News has also learned that three high-priced consultants have left eHealth since the controversy broke last Wednesday. Two individuals recently hired to senior vice-president posts are earning more than $700,000 a year, putting them among some of the highest paid civil servants in Ontario. Some things have taken place there that we simply cannot condone, Premier Dalton McGuinty acknowledged, but he rejected calls to fire the two. Fire Hudson and Kramer, opposition says
Questions about eHealth dominated question period at Queen’s Park on Thursday, the final day before the House rises for the summer, with calls for both Kramer and Hudson to be turfed. 3 million, two when Kramer was not yet hired but advising the board of directors and the third a couple months after she took office on Nov. 3, 2008. When applying for the eHealth CEO post, Kramer’s resume listed an Accenture Inc. It’s the same consulting firm that reviewed eHealth earlier this year and approved its spending practices. Chris Dingman, whose company Strategy Works Inc. Also in question are ties between the board of directors chairman Dr. If you have information on this story, send an email to
yournews@cbc. The letter of agreement is dated Feb.
Health Minister David Caplan stressed that Hudson has made tremendously valuable contributions to the province’s health care sector. EHealth Ontario was created last fall out of a merger between the Ministry of Health’s electronic health program and the SSHA, an agency criticized for spending more than $600 million over its six-year lifespan and producing little to show for it.
This latest information comes on the heels of news revealed by CBC News of personal connections between top eHealth officials and executives at two companies awarded more than $3. I think the fair thing to do in the circumstance is to allow the auditor general to do his work, he added, referring to the review of spending practices currently underway. Egon Zehnder International was given the job of recruiting vice-presidents to replace some of the nine who were fired during the first four months, plus filling several newly created positions of senior vice-president. ca. But sources say the agency had access to two headhunting vendors-of-record at the time, raising questions about why it didn’t continue using those companies. Sources say eHealth CEO Sarah Kramer signed a contract worth more than $600,000 to headhunting firm Egon Zehnder International to recruit high-ranking employees for the agency. Courtyard received contracts from Cancer Care Ontario when Hudson was head of that agency. Since eHealth arose from the ashes of the embattled Smart Systems for Health Agency last September, the new level of senior VP has been added to the organizational structure. Accenture was awarded three sole-sourced contracts worth $1. , received a $162,000 untendered contract from the agency to provide leadership for organizational change. 3 million in untendered contracts. An executive assistant from Courtyard Group who was earning about $1,700 a day;
Donna Kline, a consultant who earned about $192,000 in a five-month period and was working as senior vice-president of communications. Sources describe Hudson as an old colleague and mentor to Courtyard Group’s founding partner Michael Guerriere. It may be released as early as August or September. EHealth Ontario CEO Sarah Kramer has defended previous sole-sourced contracts as necessary due to urgency. The eHealth CEO has defended nearly $5 million in sole-sourced contracts doled out in the agency’s early months as justified due to the urgency of getting the ball rolling on Ontario’s electronic health record system, set for release in 2015. The list of untendered contracts awarded by eHealth Ontario continues to grow, with information received by CBC News revealing yet another contract that was never open to competitive bids. With the formation of a new agency, the release date of fully electronic patient health records was pushed back three years to 2015 and the government allotted a three-year, $2 billion budget to eHealth. When the firm concludes its work, it will report its findings to eHealth’s finance and audit committee, whose members include Kramer and Hudson. executive, whose wife was a childhood friend, as a personal reference. They were given notice last Friday that their services were no longer needed, eHealth spokeswoman Deanna Allen said. 5, but sources say a verbal deal with Kramer was reached in November, the same month Kramer took office. The health minister also reiterated that he has asked Ontario’s auditor general to expedite his review of eHealth Ontario that was originally due for December. Courtyard was awarded a $915,000 untendered contract in October 2008, when the board, with Hudson at its helm, apparently held the agency’s purse strings.

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Chance of Christmas nurses strike over in N.B., contract talks resume

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

A provincewide nurses strike over Christmas is being ruled out as talks between the provincial government and New Brunswick Nurses Union are scheduled to resume this week.
The two sides will be joined at the negotiating table by John McEvoy, a University of New Brunswick law professor, who will act as a special mediator.
Last Thursday, the nurses voted 94 per cent in favour of strike action and were in a position to walk off the job as early as (more…)