Question for Minister of Health - Another Clinic Closing

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Another doctor is winding up their clinic in Halifax. Jason Haslam received a letter last week informing him and his partner that they no longer have a family doctor as of May 31st. They have spent numerous stints on the family doctor list, but he says, “My real concern is for my fellow patients. There could well be patients recently diagnosed with cancer, for example, who may also be waiting on another long list for specialist treatment, or elderly patients like my own mother, who not only need regular checkups but also a family doctor to advocate for them with specialists, insurance, and so on. I live in real fear of what happens if she loses her doctor too.” Jason and the people he’s concerned about need a family health team. When will the government stop the exodus of family doctors from the Central Zone?

THE SPEAKER: The honourable Minister of Health and Wellness.

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, there have been a number of things undertaken in order to support physicians in Central Zone and throughout the province. Most recently, there was a letter that was sent to physicians explaining that if they were winding up their practice or felt that they need practice support, they could reach out to this 1-800 number, and that the local medical services team through NSHA and the Department of Health and Wellness would reach out to support them to ensure that they had the practice supports that they required.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Jason also said, “Ironically, in the same building as our now-former doctor, a private, for-profit clinic has opened. I guess our current Premier thinks only those who can afford to pay are allowed the luxury of health. It’s infuriating that others who may not be so lucky can simply be sentenced to the list for the crime of not having enough money.” I can table that letter. Does the minister think it’s fair that private clinics, where people have to pay to access primary care, are popping up at the same time as people are losing their family doctors?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, our government has shown a strong commitment, 6.5 billion commitments, to make sure that our publicly funded health care system has the resources that it needs. We are working very hard in primary care. Attachment does not mean access. We are looking at a variety of modalities in which patients can access care as they wait for attachment, and I would encourage people, if they do need access, to get on the Need a Family Practice Registry. That allows them a variety of different ways to support their health care, and we are looking at ways of increasing primary care providers in the province.

Endometriosis Awareness Month - March 28, 2023 Members Statement

Mr. Speaker, as my honourable colleague has just said, March is Endometriosis Awareness Month. I rise today to call on this House to prioritize funding for reproductive health care and endometriosis care in Nova Scotia. Reproductive health care and health care specific to people with uteruses is often not taken as seriously as it should be. This is especially the case when it comes to menstruation and the pain that comes with it. In Canada, one million people - 1 in 10 women and an unknown number of transgender and gender nonconforming people - live with endometriosis. This is a gynecological condition where tissue grows outside the uterus. Endometriosis symptoms include severe menstrual pain, chronic pelvic pain, and infertility. Many spend years trying to get an accurate diagnosis so that they can get proper treatment. Sometimes these folks are told that this excruciating pain is normal, but it is anything but. Symptoms are managed using a combination of medical and surgical care. I call on this government to prioritize the health care for people with uteruses and ensure that we have the specialists and funding necessary to address endometriosis in our province. (Applause)

Need for Midwifery Investment

SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Nova Scotians have been asking government for years to invest in more midwifery services across the province. There is still zero service in Cape Breton and the Valley. Midwives in the region have been working on establishing an education program, which is a key piece of the puzzle, and they have asked for a study on how to make it happen. FOIPOP documents from the minister’s department show the process was moving along nicely until it was squashed at the last minute from the very top decision-makers. I can table that. Can the minister explain why her government is so resistant to supporting midwives and new parents that they won’t even undertake a simple study asked for by midwives across the region?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: Just to let the member know, we’re currently focusing on stabilizing our current midwifery services across the province. There are some issues around recruitment and retention. I also want to make note that we do have an unattached baby clinic. Certainly, the midwives in this province have been instrumental in supporting that. We are using midwives to the best of our scope, but currently, the focus is on stabilizing current midwifery services.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Perhaps we’ll have a chance to talk about retention in Estimates, but after this government tabled its budget last week, speaking of Estimates, our caucus heard from midwives and health advocates who were heartbroken that another budget has been tabled with no new investment in midwifery, including no new midwifery services in Cape Breton, where there was the highest rate of C-sections in low-risk pregnancies in the province between 2017 and 2020. C-sections are the most common kind of surgery, and midwives can help lower these rates and free up hospital resources, but we have to invest in them. If this government will spend whatever it takes to fix health care, why does it continue to refuse to implement the sensible and affordable suggestion to invest in primary care that will benefit pregnant people and free up other primary care providers in this system?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, this has been a historic budget in terms of our investment in health care- More, Faster. We certainly are committed to improving primary care access, and again, we go back to the fact that we need to stabilize our current services before we spread ourselves too thin and make the program not available to anyone.

QUESTION FOR MINISTER OF HEALTH RE: CRITICAL SUPPORT FOR PARAMEDICS

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. We are in critical need of support for and investment in our emergency response infrastructure. We are seeing paramedics having to work 12- to 14-hour shifts, and have seen response times in the Central Zone jump from eight or nine minutes just a few years ago to 27 minutes now. Today’s budget responds to this crisis with a move towards single-paramedic response units, an initiative that has faced criticism from paramedics for putting patient and paramedic safety at risk.

Can the minister explain why today’s budget is so disconnected from the emergency care crisis that Nova Scotia’s health system is facing?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: I would like to say that the SPEAR unit is actually a very innovative way to support people who don’t need emergency care. We know that there are some people who call 911 for a variety of reasons - most certainly because they need assistance. But the physicians in medical comms working with paramedics in the field have actually been able to support four out of ten individuals in community to be diverted away from the emergency room for the appropriate care (Inaudible) community. We are investing in primary health care, emergency services, workforce strategy, surgical access, cancer care, and patient flow. I don’t think any of those are disconnected from the health care of Nova Scotians.

SUSAN LEBLANC: We all know the challenges facing our province’s paramedics, and we know our emergency care system is at a breaking point. Paramedics are feeling left behind, and they are looking to the government for support to be able to continue in their profession: serving Nova Scotians. This budget saw an expansion of the More Opportunities for Skilled Trades tax rebate to certain health care workers and emergency medical care, but excluded paramedics entirely. In a time when we are facing unprecedented emergency response times, paramedic resignations and vacancies, and unsustainable working conditions, why is the government refusing to support and recognize the importance of the paramedics?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: I want to assure the member that we continue to invest in paramedics in the EHS system. We have invested $3.5 million in equipment to prevent injury. We’ve implemented double overtime for paramedics in recognition that they need to stay sometimes after their shifts. We’ve covered a benefit that was a great cost to paramedics, resulting in $2,500 more per year in their pockets. We offered them a $5,000 bonus. We have a workforce planning group that meets on a monthly basis to support paramedics. EMCI has a strategic working group made up of paramedics. We are very committed to paramedics in this province. We have actually asked the union to go back to the table so that we can - at a table - talk about the things that are important to paramedics, and give them the work-life balance they want.

When will this government support paramedics in the ways that they need?

SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. I want to bring the House’s attention to a growing crisis among our province’s paramedics. Numbers from the Department of Health and Wellness show that 133 paramedics left the profession in 2022 for reasons other than retirement. I can table that. This is more than double the number from just a few years earlier. Paramedics have attributed most of these numbers to chronic undercompensation in the profession. Wages in other provinces are substantially higher than in Nova Scotia. Paramedics save lives every day and are as integral to the health system as nurses and doctors. My question is: When will this government support paramedics in the ways that they need?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: I, too, am very concerned about our paramedics. I have worked with paramedics for 31 years, and I greatly appreciate the way in which they have supported patients throughout Nova Scotia. We have done a number of things. We have invested $3.5 million in equipment to support them because they are off, and we know that injuries have been an issue. Recently, we covered a short-term illness benefit for them in December and put more money in their pockets. We have offered a $5,000 bonus to them. We continue to look at their scope of practice. We have a variety of different practice settings for paramedics. We have introduced an $11,500 tuition rebate for paramedics to incentivize people. (Interruption) We’re very focused on the paramedic workforce, and we will continue to work with them to find the practice setting that they want.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, in spite of all that, in spite of all of those things, the growing number of paramedic vacancies is a cause for concern. We hear that every paramedic in this province, at this point, has an exit strategy. The 2022 total of 255 vacancies is significantly higher than previous years and the impact of this is becoming clear, and I can table that. We’re seeing more than four times the number of late responses to emergency calls than just two years ago, and I can table that. Nova Scotians need to know that there will be emergency care available when they need it, and paramedics need to be supported to stay in the province and in their profession. Retention and compensation is a clear issue among our province’s paramedics, and this government’s failure to meaningfully address this has put Nova Scotians’ health and safety at risk. Will the minister commit to raising paramedic wages to be competitive with the rest of the country?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, there are a number of things that we are working with. We do have a committee that has been struck with the Department of Health and Wellness, Nova Scotia Health, EMCI, the paramedics union, and the college to support their practice environment and make sure they have adequate work-life balance. In fact, we have signalled to the paramedics union that we would like to get back to the table to address their compensation as well as work-life balance concerns because their contract is up at the end of October.

MSI for Migrant Workers

Mr. Speaker, on this Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, I rise to draw attention to the unjust treatment of migrant workers - many of whom are racialized - in Nova Scotia.

In order to access our province’s public healthcare system migrant workers must have a one-year work permit. Unfortunately, contracts under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program, or SWAP, are (at the most) eight months per calendar year. This means that all workers under that program have to pay for their healthcare or rely on insurance packages negotiated by their employers.

I draw to the House’s attention Kerian Burnett, an agricultural worker from Jamaica diagnosed with cancer September of 2022 while working on a Nova Scotia strawberry farm. Ms. Burnett was fired after becoming ill and so doesn’t have access to the private health insurance that was tied to her employment. She is accumulating thousands of dollars in medical bills. No One Is Illegal Halifax/Kjipuktuk has created a Go Fund Me to help her.

I join No One is Illegal in calling on the government to extend MSI to all migrant workers.

Tribal Boxing Esker Cup

Always proud to have Tribal Boxing Club in #DartmouthNorth. This week I recognized 3 boxers and their coach for attending an international competition in Ireland:

Mr. Speaker, in mid-October, coach Bridget Stevens and three tribal boxing club boxers travelled from Mi’kma’ki to Ireland for the Esker AllFemale Box Cup, one of the largest competitions for female boxers in the world. Boxers Holly McDonald, Natteal Battiste, and Vanity Thompson represented the North End Dartmouth club, competing alongside over 300 boxers from 14 different countries. This was the first Esker All Female Box Cup after a two-year hiatus. Excitingly, Vanity Thompson, a VON licensed practical nurse by day, brought home the Best Novice Fighter of the Year award to Dartmouth North. I am in awe of the dedication, tenacity, and athleticism these boxers have demonstrated. I ask the House to join me in extending congratulations to Holly, Natteal, and Vanity, and coach Bridget on representing Dartmouth so well on an international stage, and to Vanity for being recognized as one of the best in the world. They all continue to do Dartmouth North and Nova Scotia proud.

Supporting Our Unhoused Neighbours

This week I spoke in the Nova Scotia Legislature about the struggles of some of our unhoused neighbors. Here is what I had to say:

As we sit here, my constituency office in Dartmouth North is actively supporting at least nine people who are unhoused. Some are sleeping in tents in designated parks, some are sleeping rough wherever they can, some are staying in the emergency shelter in Halifax, some in their cars, and too few are in hotels. Over half are seniors, many have serious health concerns, and some have lost custody of their children. All of them desperately want stable and safe, not to mention adequate, affordable, and healthy housing. We help them call the shelter diversion line; they tell them they’re over capacity. We help them call shelters, put them in touch with housing support workers, help them apply for emergency housing. We help them find food and gift cards. Sometimes the best we can do is help them find a tent. It is a sad state of affairs when MLA offices have to give out tents. It’s simply not good enough. We owe it to everyone who is or is at risk of becoming unhoused to come together and take urgent and substantial action on affordable housing. We can and we must do better.

Susan Leblanc Questions Houston Government on Heating Help

The income threshold and the refunds given out under the Heating Assistance Rebate Program have not changed in almost 15 years. Recently I asked the Houston government If they would raise the income threshold and the refunds under the program to allow more people to qualify in the @nslegislature. Below is our exchange:


SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Premier. The Heating Assistance Rebate Program is designed to help people with the cost of heating their homes, but the income thresholds and the refunds given out under the program - between $100 and $200 - haven’t changed in almost 15 years. The price of furnace oil hit $1.98.4 cents per litre in Halifax last week and it has gone up about 30 cents since October. Dan McTeague, the President of Canadians for Affordable Energy, says; “I’m not so sure we’re not going to see incidents of people literally freezing this winter.” Will the Premier raise the income thresholds and the refunds under the Heating Assistance Rebate Program to allow more people to qualify for the program?

HON. COLTON LEBLANC: I certainly understand the hardships that Nova Scotians are feeling at the price at the pumps and when it comes to heating their homes with home heating oil. The member is correct: that program did open up earlier this week, with up to $200 for eligible Nova Scotians. We continuously look at ways to improve this program, Mr. Speaker. Again, on this side of the House, we’re very concerned about the impacts of what’s going to happen with the Liberal carbon tax and call on members opposite to join in opposing the federal carbon tax.

SUSAN LEBLANC: I thank the minister for that answer. I will say simply that if you are concerned, then you can do what I’m suggesting in this question and that is raise the threshold for this program because that is in your control. Mr. Speaker, people cannot afford their bills. A Wolfville woman contacted us to say, simply put, a 10 per cent increase in energy costs would likely leave me homeless. I could not afford another apartment. There is no amount of cutting back or efficiency that could close the gap. I’ve already made use of Efficiency Nova Scotia programs. I already use the food bank and I already keep the heat too low. I will ask again: Will the Premier or government expand the Heating Assistance Rebate Program?

COLTON LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, we’re interested in targeted solutions and that’s why earlier this year we topped up the Heating Assistance Rebate program. All options are on the table. We’re considering what we have to do to support Nova Scotians. Improvements to the program ensure that Nova Scotians were getting the money quicker into their pockets through direct deposit. I’d like to remind the member we did create the Seniors Care Grant and there are actually provisions under that grant now - up to $250 for home heating oil - and I encourage her to remind her constituents about that.

High dose flu vaccine for seniors question

Yesterday I asked the Minister of Health why her government doesn't cover the cost of the high dose flu vaccine for seniors. View the video and read our exchange below!

“SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Flu season has begun, and Public Health is urging everyone to get their flu shot, especially people over 65. The National Advisory Committee on Immunization says that seniors should get the high-dose flu vaccine, but many will not because of the cost, which can be $80 or more. My question for the minister is simple: Will her government cover the cost of the high-dose flu vaccine?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: High-dose flu vaccination is available in congregate settings, high-risk settings, this year as it has been for the past number of years.

We do feel and know from science that the regular flu shot, which all of us get, is effective in the community, and we will continue to publicly fund that flu vaccine this year.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, seniors in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, New Brunswick, P.E.I., Yukon, and the Northwest Territories will have their highdose flu vaccine for free. The average cost of an influenza hospitalization in Canada is over $10,000 and in 2020, it killed almost 6,000 Canadians. Why does the minister believe that seniors in Nova Scotia don’t deserve as much access to the high-dose flu shot as seniors in the other provinces and territories?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Again, the evidence would show that the regular flu season vaccination covers influenza well. We have also made it more available, actually, in communities this Fall by making sure that we partner with our pharmacy partners. You can now book and plan your immunization online. We continue to support seniors in this province, and we will offer high-dose flu shots in long-term care and other high-risk settings.”

Recognizing Ori Foods for Small Business Week

Continuing to celebrate (yummy) #halifaxsmallbusiness week by talking about Ori Foods in the Nova Scotia Legislature:

Mr. Speaker, I would like to celebrate Small Business Week by recognizing a newer addition to the Dartmouth North small business landscape, Ori Foods Co. The small but mighty restaurant and café is owned and run by Zoë Bartel and Lachlan Culjak, a pastry chef and a chef with international experience. The two previously owned Ori Chocolate Company, which sold its wares at the Alderney Landing Farmers Market. Zoë and Lachlan had been looking to open a spot back home in Nova Scotia when they came upon a space at 258 Wyse Road, just down the street from some of Zoë’s family, and we’re really happy that they chose that spot. Since Ori opened in April 2022, I have enjoyed many delicious locally sourced meals and treats at the beautifully designed café. The food and coffee are truly excellent, and my constituency coordinator, Rebecca, is especially excited that they have two dairy and gluten-free cookie options. I ask the House to join me in thanking Zoë and Lachlan for choosing Dartmouth North as Ori’s home, and I encourage everyone to stop by and taste some delicious treats.

Stepping Stone Congratulations on New Building

I opened up this sitting of the Nova Scotia Legislature by congratulating Stepping Stone on the purchase of a building in #DartmouthNorth. Here is what I said:

Mr. Speaker, Stepping Stone is an organization that supports current and former sex workers, people at risk of entering the sex trade, and people who have been sex-trafficked. Though I have long admired their work, I recently got to know the folks at Stepping Stone a little better, because they started holding programs across the hall from my former constituency office. My office colleagues and I loved the laughter, camaraderie, and energy that Stepping Stone brought to our building. I rise today to congratulate everyone at Stepping Stone on their recent purchase of a building in Dartmouth North. The new-to-them building will be renovated to include space for client drop-in programming, donations, outreach, court support staff, and computers for their clients to use. Excitingly, the upstairs will be turned into an apartment for transitional housing for clients who face barriers to finding and keeping housing. I am thrilled that Stepping Stone is putting down roots in Dartmouth North and I ask the whole House to join me in celebrating this big move for this vital organization.

Preserve & Protect the Dartmouth Lakes Members Statement

April 19, 2021

Mr. Speaker, I rise to bring the attention of the House to the Dartmouth Lakes. This week my colleague from Dartmouth South and I re-sent our letter for the third time to the Minister of Environment, appealing for immediate action to help us preserve these precious ecological gems. These lakes are an invaluable ecological, social and economic resource that must be protected, but their future is caught up in a jurisdictional web which means that each level of government punts responsibility to the next. The MLA for Dartmouth South and I are calling for an urban lakes commission, something that came out of a Lakes Town Hall that we hosted two years ago. Summer is coming, meaning the return of blue-green algae and invasive species that keep us from enjoying the natural beauty of Dartmouth. After an especially challenging year we know how important our outdoor spaces are. It has been two years that we have been advocating for the protection of the Dartmouth lakes, and it’s time that the province take urgent and decisive action.

PERMANENT Rent Control Statement in the Legislature

March 12, 2021

Nova Scotia Legislature

Mr. Speaker, since the Legislature last met, in the Spring of 2020, the issue that I have heard about most in my community, even during COVID-19, has been, unsurprisingly, the problem of unaffordable rents and the need for permanent rent control. Like many other members here, I have received hundreds of emails and phone calls asking me to support rent control in this House. Rent control was also the issue that I heard about most on the doorsteps during the 2017 election - so much so that I brought the issue to our caucus to see if we could push this government to restore rent control, which the Liberal government had cut in the 1990s. Since then, myself and the member for Halifax Needham have tabled legislation on rent control, and both times the bills have died on the order paper due to the lack of support from this government. 200 ASSEMBLY DEBATES FRI., MAR. 12, 2021 Rent control can mean the difference between staying housed and becoming homeless for people in Dartmouth North and all over Nova Scotia, the difference between paying for groceries, medications, and power, or not paying for them. I fully support the temporary rent control measures that were introduced this past Fall. They have made a great difference to Nova Scotians, but we need full, permanent rent control. I hope this government will use this legislative session to bring that in.

Dartmouth North Mental Health Services statement

March 12, 2021

Nova Scotia Legislature

Mr. Speaker, Dartmouth North is a vibrant community that is home to many people facing systemic discrimination and marginalization, including a historical African Nova Scotian community. Our beautiful community has some of the lowest incomes and some of the highest levels of social deprivation, food insecurity, and rates of mental health and addiction disorders in the province. Dartmouth North also has no publicly funded mental health and addictions clinics. From people who access these services, they currently get themselves to downtown Dartmouth to one of the three locations there. Many people walk or use mobility aids to get to their appointments, some take transit and some drive. Later this Spring, Mental Health and Addictions will be closing all downtown Dartmouth locations and moving to a new building in Portland Hills - an increased distance of almost seven kilometres for people in Dartmouth North. This new location is difficult to access by foot, mobility aid, or public transit for people in my community and may mean the difference between getting and not getting mental health services. Mr. Speaker, I am calling on the government to support the call from members of my community and ensure stable and permanent satellite mental health services in accessible locations in Dartmouth North.

#CodeCritical Ambulance Crisis Speech

March 11, 2021

This speech can be read in the official record of the Nova Scotia Legislature, the Hansard, here.

SUSAN LEBLANC: I am glad to rise to speak to this critical issue, though of course saddened at the conditions which make it necessary and the fact that we even have to have this as an emergency debate. It’s not an exaggeration to say that paramedics have been sounding the alarm for years about this issue and so has our caucus.

First, it is important to put on the record some of the basics of the situation at hand. These are the things we know: paramedics are overworked and burning out. They spend hours waiting to offload patients at the hospital. They can work 16-hour shifts without eating. We have been hearing about the various tweaks that this government has been trying for years now, with little result.

The Code Critical issue is not just an ambulance or paramedic issue. It is a systemic, widespread health care system-wide problem that will not be solved by rearranging how our ambulance system works. We need widespread reinvestment in our entire provincial health network. Our system is taxed to the limit and the entire health care system and its backlogs are at the root of the #CodeCritical crisis and paramedics being unable to offload their patients at the hospitals.

Mr. Speaker, for years this government has refused to release a comprehensive report, paid for with $144,000 of public money, that analyzed the paramedic predicament. We know that this is called the Fitch Report. I will say off the bat that part of the campaign to have the Fitch report finally released by the government sent no fewer than 2,500 emails to me and to other members of this House to ask the government - to implore the government - to release the Fitch Report. The excuse that the government gave was that it could impact contract negotiations for our ambulance service provider, Emergency Medical Care Inc.

Finally, after those literally thousands of phone calls and emails from paramedics and their family members and average Nova Scotians who are concerned and, frankly, terrified at the state of our emergency health care system, the government finally decided to release the report years after it was completed.

Of course, upon its release we can see the real reason why it was hidden for so long. The report details the extreme conditions in our health care system that paramedics are faced with when they’re trying to do their job. The report states, “On average, EMC ambulances spend 1.5 hours offloading patients for Category 1 calls” or 3.25 hours measured at the 90th percentile. The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 727 president, Mike Nickerson, has said that he has heard of a paramedic waiting longer than 24 hours to offload a patient. Twenty-four hours to offload a patient. Let’s think for a moment about that patient and that paramedic. What an awful situation. When writing the report, Fitch found that nearly half of the paramedics’ time was spent driving people between different levels of hospital or nursing homes. Of those individuals being transferred between facilities, only two per cent required the skills of a paramedic or the equipment that is in one of the province’s 180 ambulances. Response times are routinely overshot in urban areas.

Fitch calculated the cost of offloading delays faced by paramedics but that important information was redacted. The public is not allowed to know, according to this government. The report also says that offload times appear to grow exponentially after 2018.

The government’s response to these challenges, which they have known about for years, was to issue a directive to the Nova Scotia Health Authority on offload times asking that they be limited to 30 minutes for emergency situations or 12 hours for transport. The former Minister of Health and Wellness tried the same thing in 2019. Offload times decreased for a period, but then increased after that again.

The government has said that it will be implementing 64 of the Fitch Report’s 68 recommendations, but it has not explained which four recommendations won’t be implemented. While I’m standing here, I would certainly urge the government not to implement the recommendation that suggests ambulance fees should be increased: “Review of patient transport fees which may lead to opportunities for increases, particularly as they apply to non-Canadian residents. Additionally, amounts unpaid by Canadian residents could be collected by other means, such as at the time of driver’s and other licence renewals.” I will remind the members of this House that ambulance fees can deter people from seeking medically necessary help.

I will also remind people about our caucus’s bill - which died on the Order Paper when the House was prorogued - to eliminate fees for medically necessary situations. That the government is leaving the door open to increased ambulance fees is, frankly, unacceptable.

No one has to search very far to find horrific stories of people who wait too long for an ambulance. People die while waiting for emergency help, as we tragically learned last month with the death of April George in Bass River. Even more people live in fear of what could happen to themselves, or a loved one, if an ambulance isn’t available to get to them. I know of a family member, for example, who when visiting the province to spend time here and decide whether they wanted to relocate back home here to Nova Scotia, were unfortunately in a car accident in Halifax. An ambulance took the passenger from the other vehicle to Emergency. Though she seemed fine, the paramedic on the scene said the daughter of the family should probably be seen, just in case, but there was not another ambulance to take her to the hospital. The family ended up deciding not to return to Nova Scotia. This experience was part of the decision.

As we find ourselves in a global health pandemic because of the COVID-19 virus, we know that paramedics are putting themselves and their families in harm’s way to take care of Nova Scotians during this pandemic. They will do so again should we experience another wave of the virus. Paramedics are still grappling with the same issues from before COVID-19 arrived, and some have intensified.

Like many things in our province - many systems in our government and in our province - COVID-19 has shed a light on the cracks and the chasms in those systems. This is definitely one of them. Paramedics are still working short and working extremely long shifts without breaks, being worn down, burnt out, and sometimes being assaulted at work. They now also have to contend with the risk of bringing COVID-19 home to their families. The stress is unimaginable, but IUOE 727’s request for temporary housing for paramedics during the pandemic, as was provided in Ontario, was not granted.

A scan of the #CodeCritical campaign shows dozens in the last few days in all corners of the province. Last month, after resuming the #CodeCritical campaign, paramedics reported more than 40 Code Criticals in five days across every health care zone in the province in which very few or no crews were available to respond to local emergencies.

We know the problems and we know the solutions. Frankly, our caucus has flooded this House with solutions to this very complex, multi-faceted health care crisis that is at the root of the Code Critical problem. We have introduced legislation that would build collaborative emergency care centres. We would keep community hospitals open in CBRM. We would allow physician assistants to work in the province and alleviate pressure in the system. We have introduced legislation that would require regular publishing on emergency room standards. We have committed to building a room for every resident and clearing the wait-list for long-term care that causes the extreme shortage of beds in our hospitals. We’re calling for emergency mental health response teams that would work to alleviate the burden placed on paramedics by mental health calls. We are waiting for these to be taken up by this government. We are proposing ideas, but Nova Scotians can’t wait much longer.

Mental Health Emergency Question for the Premier

March 11, 2021

View this exchange in the official record of province house here starting on page 80.

PREM.: MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES - COMMIT

SUSAN LEBLANC Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Premier. Police services have explained that they are not qualified to help people in acute mental health crisis. Both the Truro and Bridgewater police have said that they are not suited to the work. Bridgewater’s deputy chief has said, “We’re not full-time mental health caseworkers. We’re not in crisis management every day. We don’t have that experience from working full time . . . that’s not our profession.” I can table that.

Both chiefs say that much more needs to be done to help Nova Scotians in crisis, especially in rural areas. My question for the Premier is: Does the Premier agree with these police services, that when people call an emergency line in mental health crisis, they should not be met by the police?

THE PREMIER: I agree, we can do a lot more for mental health and addictions, especially what’s been shown throughout the pandemic. I am worried about those Nova Scotians who are experiencing mental health challenges and addictions. That’s why we created a new Office of Mental Health and Addictions within the Department of Health and Wellness. We’ll be hiring a clinician at the head of that office who will be working to ensure that we have more community supports - more capacity in communities - so that we do have more availability for mental health supports in Nova Scotia.

SUSAN LEBLANC: I’d like to thank the Premier for his answer. As an example, Mr. Speaker, last year alone 602 Nova Scotians in mental health crisis were met by the police after seeking help through the provincial crisis line; 7,390 more were referred out by police after someone called 911 searching for help. The police are interacting with people in mental health crisis in Nova Scotia every day. My question for the Premier is: Will the Premier commit, as part of his new initiative in mental health and addictions, to creating a province-wide mental health emergency response service?

THE PREMIER: As the member referenced in her first question, there is a crisis line that can be called and responded to immediately. There’s also another line, if it’s not of an urgent nature. We’re going to continue to bolster support for that and the Kids Help Phone and other supports we have. We’re going to make sure that we have more mental health supports in schools. We did increase the budget last time, but we’re going to look at this upcoming budget to make sure that we are supporting mental health in a more aggressive way.

Tribute to Evelyn Mitchell

Mr. Speaker, on the heels of International Women’s Day, I would like to pay tribute to a phenomenal woman and long-time resident of Dartmouth North, Evelyn Mitchell, who died in 2019. Born in Northern Ontario in 1933, Evelyn, as her daughter Caron wrote, “split firewood, went fishing and helped raise chickens during the Depression.” At 18 she married her husband of 68 years, Doug, a member of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Evelyn brought up her three independent daughters, who she taught to “do no harm but take no crap,” and she took up basket weaving, copper tooling, ceramics, crochet, and upholstery, in addition to sewing and baking. In the 1970s, when she learned that the Red Cross didn’t drive patients from Dartmouth to treatments and appointments, she received permission to run a driving service out of her home. Later Evelyn devoted herself to practising and promoting therapeutic touch, which she discovered was her calling. Evelyn Mitchell would have been the last person to think that she was leaving a strong legacy for her daughters and others, but her life and love inspired their independence and strength in the world.

Speaking to Bill No. 28 - Land Titles Initiative Acceleration Act.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased to rise to speak in favour of this bill and to see this process moving forward. I just want to say, before I begin my prepared notes, that I am especially pleased that this bill has been put forward by a number of different government departments, which hopefully signals and signifies this government’s commitment to tearing down the silos of departments and having departments work together on issues that are important to Nova Scotians. This bill was essentially sponsored by the Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage; the Office of African Nova Scotian Affairs; the Department of Lands and Forestry; and the Department of Justice - and it is really great to see.

The situation with land titles in historically Black communities in Nova Scotia is one of the clearest examples of systemic racism in our province’s history. I am glad that this bill will address some of the barriers to access, but I am sorry that they were not dealt with years ago ‑ hundreds of years ago, or even four years ago, or three years ago. Systemic, structural, anti‑Black racism means that African Nova Scotians face challenges to accessing employment, education, justice, housing, health care, and other social services.

Property ownership and inheritance is a significant side of power and privilege in our society, but Black Nova Scotians in many parts of the province may not be able to sell or bequeath or mortgage their land for historical reasons that have to do with racism. The land titles process has been excruciatingly slow for too many people and there are still families and communities that won’t be helped under this legislation.

Our caucus office has tried but has not been able to get evaluation information from the department as to how quickly the land titles process is moving or whether the government has set and met benchmarks for the program. Listening to the Minister of Justice’s comments, I would suggest that the government does recognize that the process has been too slow and there’s so much more to do, but we were endeavoring to find out about benchmarks. I’m not sure whether the fact that we couldn’t get the information is because the information simply does not exist or whether this government is not willing to share it.

Mr. Speaker, the Land Titles Initiative has been a striking example of structural racism and how it operates in insidious ways. Despite the apparently good and public intentions of the former Premier and minister, who is now the current Premier, applicants have met with hurdle after hurdle. There was even a case, as my colleague for Dartmouth South referenced, at the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia that struck down an arbitrary criterion that the department was applying to applications in their lengthy deliberations. All the while, the former minister - the current Premier - claimed to be looking for ways to be removing barriers and streamlining processes. I hope it is true that this bill will enable progress on this front.

Again, particularly encouraging is the appointment of Angela Simmonds as the executive director of the program. She has been a tireless champion for Black families in this realm and many others. I believe that the intention is very good with this bill and I am glad that these changes are coming forward. I look forward to hearing from stakeholders at the Law Amendments committee.

May I just say, before I close, that the Law Amendments committee is another example of a place we need to make sure people have access to - especially, in this case, people from the African Nova Scotian communities who may want to contribute to the Law Amendments committee. May I just put it out there that we should make sure that stakeholders in the African Nova Scotian community are made aware that a Law Amendments committee meeting is happening on this bill - I believe it is Monday, but whenever it is happening - and make sure that information is broadly communicated out to the far reaches of the province so we can have as much participation in the very important Law Amendments committee process as possible.

Member's Statement - Michelle Malette Affordable Housing Champion

March 25, 2021

I rise today to honour Michelle Malette, a resident of Dartmouth North, who is a dedicated advocate for housing for all. Michelle is currently the executive director of Out of the Cold shelter, a community-based Winter shelter and an invaluable piece of the shelter system in HRM.

When COVID-19 hit last year, Michelle - not yet the ED, but a volunteer - helped to transition Out of the Cold from a community centre gym to a hotel. For this work, and her former work with women, trans folks, and their families at Adsum House, Michelle was recognized as an Invisible Champion by the Bhayana Family Foundation. As her nominator for the award wrote, “Michelle sees the resilience and dignity in everyone she works with, so she is able to help those individuals get housing and live their best lives.”

Michelle is also an amazing mother and friend, an active member of the city’s queer and trans community, and a member of Solidarity Halifax. I ask the members of this House to join me in expressing thanks to Michelle for her fierce and uncompromising advocacy for housing as a human right and for some of our community’s most vulnerable people.