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Stay home when ill

Why is Premier King unwilling to provide the most basic of protections for Island workers?

Trish Altass Commentary

Canada’s health-care systems are under incredible strain, and Prince Edward Island is no different. Respiratory illnesses are resulting in more sick Islanders and more visits to health-care providers. P.E.I. should be doing everything it can to prevent the spread of illness.

Earlier this fall, I introduced legislation to give workers 10 days of paid sick leave because every worker should have the right to stay home when sick. This is sensible policy endorsed by health experts, economists, and researchers.

I was disappointed that both the Liberals and PCS voted unanimously against 10 days of paid sick leave. Although Premier Dennis King has suggested 10 days of paid sick leave was a number “picked out of a hat,” this could not be further from the truth. Maybe if the premier had cared enough to be in the house for the debate, he would have known this.

Evidence-based

First, the federal minister of labour has called on the province to implement 10 days of paid leave. This is similar to what has been implemented for federally regulated workers, and it is in line with what most OECD countries offer their citizens.

Second, Statistics Canada data shows that, on average, Islanders missed nine to 10 days of work due to illness in 2021. It was important to me to propose evidence-based legislation that was responsive to the real needs of Islanders.

Paid sick leave has several positive benefits for not only workers, but our communities and our health-care system. Paid sick leave is correlated with greater access of preventative health care. Paid sick leave is associated with reduced likelihood of workplace injury. In the U.S., an inability to work from home and no paid sick leave were associated with an approximate 50 per cent increase in the risk of influenza-like illness. One background paper for the World Health Organization suggested productivity losses due to working while sick were up to three times higher than loss in productivity due to sickness related absence.

Frustrating process

The process on this bill was frustrating. There was little to no engagement on this legislation from either the PCS or Liberals — the extent of their engagement was to vote against workers having any increase in legislated paid sick leave and the job protection that comes with it. This was concerning, especially as we experience an extra severe respiratory illness season and our hospitals are struggling to keep up. Supporting workers to stay home while sick is exactly the kind of policy we must be pursuing. Yet, both the Liberals and PCS said no to providing workers with legislated and permanent paid sick leave.

Premier King says he wants to wait until a review of the Employment Standards Act is complete, but this is just kicking valuable protections down the road when workers need them now. Workers simply cannot wait for a complete review of the entire act to be done, new legislation to be drafted, tabled, and finally passed. Premier King has said over and over that he follows the evidence to make the right decision, but here he shows that when it comes to his actions, he does not.

Workers are the backbone of our Island economy. As we face labour shortages across all sectors, now more than ever we must do everything we can to make P.E.I. the best place to live and work. Our workers are simply not being treated with the dignity and respect they deserve under Premier King.

This is sensible policy endorsed by health experts, economists and researchers.

Trish Altass, MLA Tyne Valley-sherbrooke

Official Opposition Green critic for economic growth, tourism and culture

OPINION

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2022-12-13T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-12-13T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://saltwire.pressreader.com/article/281651079152200

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