FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 13, 2026
Health care workers to protest government funding cuts at MPP David Piccini’s office as billion dollar budget shortfall looms over Ontario hospitals

Port Hope, ON – Health care workers represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees are organizing a rally outside local Ontario PC MPP David Piccini’s office in response to funding cuts by the provincial government. The rally will be held at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, February 17.

The government recently directed the hospitals to plan for a two per cent annual increase in funding in each of the next three years, well short of the six per cent per year increase in costs, precipitating cuts in hospitals in almost every community.

At least 1,000 jobs are being cut in hospitals in North Bay, Hamilton, Ottawa, Niagara and the GTA, as the Ontario Hospital Association warns of “no easy choices” in the wake of the billion dollar province-wide deficit.

“It’s inexcusable to cut funding while 73,000 patients are waiting longer than clinically recommended for their surgeries and 2,000 are languishing on hallway stretchers,” said Michael Hurley, president of CUPE’s Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU-CUPE), which represents 45,000 health care workers. “The PC funding plan through to 2027-28 will have devastating consequences for many people needing hospital treatment in Ontario.”

The non-partisan Financial Accountability Office of Ontario projects that the government’s plan would lead to more than 9,000 nursing and PSW job cuts and nearly 2,400 hospital bed closures.

Considering that 2,000 people in Ontario receive care in hospital hallways due to insufficient bed capacity, how can the government even conceive of bed reductions? said Hurley.

CUPE recently released a new research report,  “Driven to the brink: projected cuts to intensify Ontario’s hospital crisis,” which contrasts the additional resources required to simply maintain existing service levels with the government’s planned cuts, highlighting a 4,080 staffed bed capacity shortfall in the system by 2027-28.

These problems are self-inflicted as Ontario funds and staffs its hospitals at the lowest rate across Canada, said Sharon Richer, Secretary-Treasurer of OCHU-CUPE..

“We need a significant increase in beds and staffing levels,” he said. “We need this to clear the backlogs, end delays, and to reduce ‘hallway healthcare’ as the Ford PCs promised in their 2018 election campaign. We also need this to keep up with increasing demand pressures from a growing and aging population.”

The union is recommending the following actions by the provincial government:

  • In the short term, add 6,200 staffed beds to: get patients off hallway stretchers, allow for aging and population growth and clear the backlog of people waiting for surgeries

  • Increase core hospital funding by $3.2 billion to clear deficits and hire additional staff
  • Fund hospitals at their real costs (6% per year) with a multi-year funding commitment.

Who:  Michael Hurley, president of OCHU/CUPE
           Sharon Richer, secretary treasurer of OCHU/CUPE

What:  Health care workers rally against cuts

When: 10 a.m., February 17, Tuesday

Where: Outside MPP David Piccini’s office, 117 Peter St, Port Hope, ON 

 

-30-

For more information, contact:

Zee Noorsumar, CUPE Communications    

znoorsumar@cupe.ca
647-995-9859