OPSEU President: No surprise the ombudsman was crushed by complaints on cannabis, autism, jails

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
$500/ 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.

OPSEU President: No surprise the ombudsman was crushed by complaints on cannabis, autism, jails

Canada NewsWire

TORONTO, June 25, 2019 /CNW/ - OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas says he's not the least bit surprised that complaints to the province's ombudsman have jumped by 30 per cent since the Ford government came to power.

"When you govern with cuts and chaos, people get hurt," said Thomas. "People are in pain. People need help. And people have learned the hard way that they just can't count on any support from the clapping seals in the Conservative caucus. It's no wonder they've been flooding the ombudsman's office with complaints."

In his annual report, Ontario Ombudsman Paul Dube said his overburdened office received nearly 2,500 complaints about the Ontario Cannabis Store and all the confusion and shortages that have marred legalization.

"No shocker there," said Thomas. "To pay off his insiders and rich backers, Ford blew up the responsible plan for public cannabis sales that our union helped create. If he'd stuck with that plan, we'd now have dozens upon dozens of safe and trustworthy publicly run cannabis outlets in communities across the province.

"Instead, we've still only got a handful of profit-driven businesses. And the criminal market is having a heyday."

OPSEU First Vice-President/Treasurer Eduardo (Eddy) Almeida urged people to pay attention to the other problems flagged by the ombudsman, saying they all boil down to underinvestment and staff shortages.

"Look at how many complaints he fielded about Ford's disastrous cuts and privatizations in autism services and special education services," said Almeida. "Families are hurting and they're desperate to be heard."

Almeida also said it's significant that the ombudsman received more complaints about correctional facilities than any other topic. "For years, we've been warning governments about the Crisis in Corrections. And now we've got nearly 6,000 complaints proving us right," said Almeida, who is a Correctional Officer. "We need action. Now."

Thomas said he hopes the premier is paying attention.

"Now that Dean French is finally gone, I urge the premier to start listening to the people," said Thomas. "Ontario is better than this. We can afford to be better than this."

SOURCE Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)

View original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/June2019/25/c8682.html

Copyright CNW Group 2019

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).