AMA responds to Redford's comments on doctors' pay
CBC News
Posted: Jan 30, 2013 5:54 PM MT
Last Updated: Jan 30, 2013 7:06 PM MT
Alberta Medical Association President Dr. Michael Giuffre and Health Minister Fred Horne spoke to the media in November about steps they were taking to return to the negotiating table. (CBC)
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
The president of the Alberta Medical Association says that it is “alarming” that Premier Alison Redford has singled out physician pay both in her recent televised address and in media interviews about upcoming cuts to the budget.
In a letter posted Wednesday on the AMA website, Dr. Michael Giuffre accused Redford of stating "often-confusing and frequently misleading" numbers about physician incomes.
He said that her comments are “not particularly helpful” as negotiations resume between doctors and the province.
“She may want to reflect on points I raised in my January 21 President’s Letter regarding good faith bargaining and options open to the AMA should government fail to negotiate that way,” Giuffre said.
In that letter, Giuffre said that the AMA has retained lawyers “to assist us in exploring our options and implementing such actions should they become necessary.” He also outlined a number of possible avenues for a legal challenge.
Relations between the province and the AMA have been strained since Nov. 16th when Health Minister Fred Horne imposed a contract after he felt that talks had reached a stalemate.
The settlement was later withdrawn and Horne denied that he was imposing anything. Talks have resumed with an aim of reaching a deal by the time the provincial budget is unveiled on March 7th.
Giuffre called Redford’s new call for restraint a reversal from last fall, when the province spent $130,000 on radio and print ads to promote the Nov. 16th settlement.
“They spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer money on an advertising campaign that essentially defended and extolled the incomes of Alberta doctors as part of an affordable health care system,” Giuffre said.
Redford has been under attack for appearing to link the outcome of physician contract talks to the return of health care premiums during a telephone town hall earlier this week.
On Wednesay, her communications staff released audio where she said that her government has no intention of implementing health premiums or new taxes in this year’s budget.
Share Tools
Latest Edmonton News Headlines
- Zama spill site shows brown trees, 3 containment sites
- Apache Canada is still cleaning up a massive waste water site in northern Alberta, 18 days after the spill was first reported. more »
- AHS to reverse controversial home care decisions
- Alberta Health Services will reverse their earlier decision to replace home-care services in three Edmonton facilities, said AHS president and CEO Chris Eagle today. more »
- What Happened to Betty Anne Gagnon?
- Betty Anne Gagnon was found dead in the parking lot of an Alberta gas station in 2009. Her sister and brother-in-law were charged in relation to her death. The CBC takes an in-depth look at the shocking case and the questions that remain about how the province cares for developmentally-disabled adults. more »
- City hopes to expand Downtown Proud
- The city is looking to expand a program that relies on homeless people to help clean up downtown Edmonton. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Neil Macdonald: Washington's obsession with leakers
- Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are just the most prominent targets in an all-out legal and propaganda campaign that America's security apparatus is mounting against leakers everywhere, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
- Who's who in the Senate expense controversy
- Keeping track of the names popping up in the ongoing Senate expenses controversy — from the investigators to the four senators themselves — could be a difficult task for even the most seasoned political observers. more »
- How open is Ottawa's new 'open data' website?
- Treasury Board President Tony Clement is touting the federal government's revamped data portal as a "new natural resource." But that online window for previously published data arrives at the same time the government faces controversy over just how open it really is. more »
- 2 men jailed in Dominican wedding fight return to Canada
- Two Canadian men who were detained in the Dominican Republic for nearly three weeks after a post-wedding fight broke out at a resort have returned to Toronto, the latest step in a drama that the wife of one of the men said was "like a scene from the movies." more »
- Amber Alert ends after infant girl located by Edmonton police
- Zama spill site shows brown trees, 3 containment sites
- AHS to reverse controversial home care decisions
- Coun. Iveson confirms entry into Edmonton's mayor race
- St. Joe's program helps aboriginal students graduate
- Man charged in connection with 2 Edmonton homicides
- New EPSB budget to cut 339 jobs
- CFIA shuts down Aliya's Foods over meat concerns
- City hopes to expand Downtown Proud

