Ontario health unit merger is still a bad idea for the north, mayors say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 07:03 PM | Calgary | -16.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Ontario health unit merger is still a bad idea for the north, mayors say

Mayors of the five largest cities in northern Ontario are asking the province to abandon a plan to merge health units in the province.

'We don't want to see the public health capacity diminished at all,' Sault Ste. Marie mayor says

Christian Provenzano is the mayor of Sault Ste. Marie. (Twitter)

Mayors of the five largest cities in northern Ontario are asking the province to abandon a plan to merge health units in the province.

The plan, whichwas on the table before the pandemic hit, cuts the number of public health units in the province from 35 to 10, leaving just two for allof northern Ontario.

While the plan is currently on pause, Sault Ste. Marie Mayor Christian Provenzanosays he worries the government will go ahead with the arrangement after the pandemic. He recently wrote a letter to Premier DougFord, asking him to abandon the idea altogether. Itwas also signed by the mayors of Timmins, Greater Sudbury, North Bay, and Thunder Bay.

"We don't want to see the public health capacity diminished at all. We often feel under-serviced in the north, and there's good reason for that," Provenzano said.

"I know that my relationship with Algoma public health has been really critical throughout this pandemic, and I've really appreciated the nature of the relationship and having access to AlgomaPublic Health. And I think it would be much more difficult if there was just a northeast public health unit and a northwest public health unit."

He saysthe mayors are also concerned with another part of the proposed restructuring plan, which would see municipalities responsible for a larger shareof local health unit funding.

"Municipal levies are stretched to begin with. The province cannot shift the responsibility to pay for public health to the municipalities, any greater than we already bear it. There are provincial programs that are funded through municipal levies," he said.

"If that ratio is increased, that is a property tax increase everywhere commercial, industrial and residential. And it would impact all of the levies in northern Ontario. And that's a problem."

Provenzano notes that it's already difficult to provide core services within the currentmunicipal levy.

"In northern Ontario we don't have the same assessment growth as you see in some areas of southern Ontario to absorb additional costs," he said.

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content

With files from Jonathan Pinto