Hospital worker fired after Indigenous woman’s death should be reinstated: arbitrator
MONTREAL — An arbitration tribunal has ordered the reinstatement of an orderly who was fired after an Indigenous woman filmed Quebec hospital staff insulting her as she died.
In an Aug. 16 decision, the arbitrator said that while Myriam Leblanc made inappropriate comments toward Joyce Echaquan, she was not responsible for the bulk of the poor treatment the woman received prior to her death.
“The faulty conduct occurred on only one occasion, in an emergency and acute crisis situation, and over approximately five minutes,” arbitrator Serge Brault wrote. The orderly’s actions, he added, couldn’t be compared to the “insulting, vulgar, racist and rude remarks and behaviour” of the nurse who was also fired.
Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw mother of seven, filmed herself on Facebook Live as a nurse and an orderly were heard making derogatory comments toward her in the hours prior to her death at a hospital in Joliette, Que., northeast of Montreal, on Sept. 28, 2020.


