Critics question Quebec health-care worker suspensions for taking toast, doughnut
MONTREAL — Quebec’s emergency rooms are overcrowded and workers are in short supply, but for the past week a spotlight has shone on the price paid by health-care staff for illicit snacking.
There was disbelief Dec. 2 when the Journal de Montréal reported that a nurse in a long-term care facility south of Montreal had been accused of theft and suspended three days without pay for eating a slice of toast and peanut butter intended for residents.
In the following days, similar suspensions came to light. An orderly who had been working 21 years in a long-term care facility in Montreal was suspended 30 days in the summer of 2020 for eating a doughnut taken from the kitchen. La Presse reported the case of an orderly in Longueuil who was suspended five days without pay for eating a slice of pizza and confronting a colleague whom she suspected of reporting her to management.
Jennifer Genest, vice-president of a Quebec union representing health-care workers in private residences for the elderly, said her union has been denouncing these types of disciplinary measures for years.