Kingston to spend $1M on doctor recruitment despite mayor's fears - Action News
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Ottawa

Kingston to spend $1M on doctor recruitment despite mayor's fears

Councillorsin Kingston, Ont., have voted to add$1 million to the city's 2024 budget in a bid to attract more health-care providers, but the extra funds come with a warning from the city's mayor that doctorrecruitment in Ontario seems headed toward "madness."

Pitting municipalities against each other in bidding war 'madness,' Bryan Paterson warns

A man with a goatee and salt and pepper hair stands next to a grey brick wall. Behind him are several large pillars.
Kingston Mayor Bryan Paterson supported the $1-million investment to attract doctors, but was also among those who raised concerns during the 2024 budget process about the city paying for a provincial responsibility. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Councillorsin Kingston, Ont., have voted to add$1 million to the city's 2024 budget in a bid to attract more health-care providers, but the extra funds come with a warning from the city's mayor that doctorrecruitment in Ontario seems headed toward "madness."

The investment received unanimous support from council following two days of marathon budget meetings earlier this week. It's the city's first budget prepared underthe province's new "strong mayor" powers.

District 6 Coun. Jimmy Hassanintroduced the call for more funding, saying doctors are retiring and moving away, leaving residents without care.

It's time for council to "step upand show Kingstonians that we are thinking about them, we stand with them and we are committed to taking care of them," Hassan said.

That kick-started a conversation about the fact that health care falls under the province's purview.

Pittsburgh District Coun.Ryan Boehme said he's against wading into issues that should be covered by other levels ofgovernment, but added in this case it's clear there's a "dire need within ourcommunity," and noted municipalities are competing against one another to attract doctors and nurse practitioners.

City offeredsigning bonuses

In 2021, Kingston set aside $2 million to attract more doctors, offering interested physicians a $100,000 signing bonus.

The city has managed to sign 13 new doctorsso far, with another two pending, according to Craig Desjardins, the city's director of strategy, innovation and partnerships who oversees doctor recruitment.

But between retirements and the realitythat younger family doctors tend to start out with smaller rosters, "we've been treading water," he told the meeting.

Desjardinsestimated roughly 30,000 people in the city are currently without primary care.

A person with a dog walks past some 19th-century buildings.
An estimated 30,000 Kingstonians are without primary health care, roughly 20 per cent of the city's population. (Brian Morris/CBC)

Councillor among thousands without a doctor

Coun. Gary Oosterhof, who represents the Countryside District, shared his personal experience.

"My family was part of the clinic of six retiring doctors," he told his council colleagues. "There is a crisis in just trying to get a doctor's appointment in this town."

In May, six doctors at Frontenac Medical Associates retired at once, leaving more than 8,000 patients behind, among them three generations of the same family who all lost their primary health-care provider.

We talk to Kingston Mayor Bryan Paterson about why he says he will not support putting family doctor recruitment into the regular city budget.

Kingston'sCAO Lanie Hurdle said staff planned to report back on the program in February, and saidthey had intentionally left a request for more funding out of the budget process.

"If we start to include health-care services in the municipal budget it will become just natural that we will start to finance health-care programs," she explained."We wanted to make sure that that was separated."

'More and more for less and less'

Mayor Bryan Paterson shared similar reservations.

While he supported the investment, which will be pulled from the city's working reserve fund, he voicedconcerns about the $1 million setting any sort of precedent.

"I will never, ever support putting this into the regular city budget," he said.

A woman with grey and black hair in a neat bun wears clear glasses and a stethoscope around her neck. She's standing next to a list of name cards with the titles of different doctors written in burgundy.
Dr. Lili Mileva stands next to a lists of doctors at Frontenac Medical Associates in Kingston. As of the end of May, the number of physicians practising there is down to two. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Paterson pointed to nearby Hastings County, which recently boosted its own physician incentive from $100,000 to $150,000, and said the situation essentially pits communities against one another is a bidding war.

"Do you know where this is going? We're going to be spending more and more for less and less," he told councillors.

"Madness. There's got to be a much better way to address this issue."