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EDMONTON Employees at a home for persons with developmental disabilities are celebrating after an arbitrator found the provincial government was not meeting its own policies on compensation. On Friday, an arbitrator determined that the provincial government violated its pandemic single-site policy for staff at Michener Centre. The Michener Centre in Red Deer is a provincially run facility for adults with developmental disabilities. The province’s single site order mandates all staff working in a long-term care home or designated supportive living facility are required to work at only one site for the duration of the pandemic. The policy was intended to curb COVID-19 transmission and was backed by a ministerial order signed by Labour and Immigration Minister Jason Copping in April 2020.
CALGARY Several hundred workers at a southeast Calgary care facility that was the site of a number of COVID-19 outbreaks last year voted to join Alberta s largest union. The Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE) announced the results of the vote of more than 300 auxiliary nurses at AgeCare Seton on April 28. Union officials say by joining, they are improving their working conditions and care of the residents at the facility. The organizing that these workers have done is inspiring, and we’re proud to have them in our union family, Bobby-Joe Borodey, a vice-president with AUPE, said in a release.
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Staff at Fort Saskatchewan Correctional Centre are demanding an independent review after a survey found most employees feel their workplace is “toxic.”
Seventy per cent of respondents to a recent survey reported feeling bullied at work, according to results released last Wednesday by the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE). The AUPE represents the majority of workers at the facility, including correctional officers, licensed practical nurses and administrative staff. Around 80 per cent of staff filled out the AUPE survey.
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Staff at Fort Saskatchewan Correctional Centre are demanding an independent review after a survey found most employees feel their workplace is “toxic.”
Seventy per cent of respondents to a recent survey reported feeling bullied at work, according to results released last Wednesday by the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE). The AUPE represents the majority of workers at the facility, including correctional officers, licensed practical nurses and administrative staff. Around 80 per cent of staff filled out the AUPE survey.
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Try refreshing your browser. Fort Correctional staff demand independent review of toxic workplace Back to video