/R E P E A T -- MEDIA ADVISORY - Mental health workers ask MPPs to help end workplace violence/

Ad blocking detected

Thank you for visiting CanadianInsider.com. We have detected you cannot see ads being served on our site due to blocking. Unfortunately, due to the high cost of data, we cannot serve the requested page without the accompanied ads.

If you have installed ad-blocking software, please disable it (sometimes a complete uninstall is necessary). Private browsing Firefox users should be able to disable tracking protection while visiting our website. Visit Mozilla support for more information. If you do not believe you have any ad-blocking software on your browser, you may want to try another browser, computer or internet service provider. Alternatively, you may consider the following if you want an ad-free experience.

Canadian Insider Ultra Club
$432/ year*
Daily Morning INK newsletter
+3 months archive
Canadian Market INK weekly newsletter
+3 months archive
30 publication downloads per month from the PDF store
Top 20 Gold, Top 30 Energy, Top 40 Stock downloads from the PDF store
All benefits of basic registration
No 3rd party display ads
JOIN THE CLUB

* Price is subject to applicable taxes.

Paid subscriptions and memberships are auto-renewing unless cancelled (easily done via the Account Settings Membership Status page after logging in). Once cancelled, a subscription or membership will terminate at the end of the current term.

/R E P E A T -- MEDIA ADVISORY - Mental health workers ask MPPs to help end workplace violence/

Canada NewsWire

TORONTO, Oct. 16, 2017 /CNW/ - Mental health workers represented by the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) will host a news conference at Queen's Park on October 17 to urge MPPs to help end the growing violence inside their workplaces.

Date:

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Time:

9:30 a.m.

Location:

Queen's Park Media Studio, Queen's Park, Toronto

 

The news conference is part of a lobby day during which some 30 OPSEU members will meet with MPPs to discuss funding, staffing, training, security measures, and mental health infrastructure.

"Conditions inside mental health centres and related community agencies are out of hand," said Ed Arvelin, chair of OPSEU's Mental Health Division. "We'll be sitting down with MPPs to find out exactly where they stand on violence against our members. The rate of assaults, threats and injuries in our workplaces is growing and we need a commitment from MPPs that they will stand with us and fight on our behalf."

OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas will host the news conference, at which Arvelin and health and safety activist Carol Mundley will also speak .

OPSEU represents more than 7,000 members working in mental health care across Ontario.

SOURCE Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)

View original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/October2017/17/c5907.html

Copyright CNW Group 2017

Comment On!

140
Upload limit is up to 1mb only
To post messages to your Socail Media account, you must first give authorization from the websites. Select the platform you wish to connect your account to CanadianInsider.com (via Easy Blurb).