Province should expand eligibility for pandemic pay | Unpublished
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Mike Schreiner's picture
Toronto, Ontario
About the author

A leading advocate for independent businesses, local food and sustainable communities, Mike Schreiner is well known for his leadership in co-founding the award-winning Local Food Plus organization. He brings a proven track record in business and non-profit leadership roles to the Ontario political scene. Schreiner was elected leader of the Green Party of Ontario (GPO) on November 14, 2009. Schreiner, a 43-year old father of two, started his career in the Guelph region as an entrepreneur and advocate in the local food movement. As co-founder of WOW Foods, an award winning local organic food distribution company, Schreiner worked for over 10 years to connect local farmers with consumers in the GTA and Guelph. His business was awarded the Citizen’s Bank of Canada Ethics in Action Award for socially responsible business and the Toronto Food Policy Council’s Local Food Hero Award. He is also co-founder of Earthdance Organics, a Guelph-based food production business that supplied area health foods stores and farmer’s markets in the early 2000s. Building on that success, he helped establish Local Food Plus (LFP), a non-profit that brings farmers and consumers together to promote financially, socially and environmentally sustainable local food systems. While at LFP, the organization won the Canadian Environment Award for Sustainable Living, a Green Toronto Award of Excellence--Health Category, a Green Toronto Award of Excellence--Market Transformation Category and NOW Magazine’s Best of Toronto Award for best new environmental initiative. Family and community are important to Mike. His wife Sandy and their two daughters are active, spending their free time gardening, hiking, fishing, cycling and volunteering in community activities.

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Province should expand eligibility for pandemic pay

May 10, 2020

It is not fair to recognize some frontline health workers for their heroic contributions during COVID-19 and not others.

Workers standing shoulder-to-shoulder in our hospitals to battle this virus should all have access to pandemic pay because they are all dealing with increased workloads and pressure.

These omissions might have been an oversight, but they are hurtful to excluded frontline workers who are ensuring our healthcare system functions during this unprecedented time.

The province should expand eligibility to include primary care nurses and doctors seeing high risk patients and staffing testing centres; to health care workers in private settings such as PSWs and RPNs; to medical laboratory workers and medical radiation technologists in hospitals; to registered midwives; and to others providing essential healthcare during this crisis.