Officials promise changes at ‘toxic’ Montreal hospital after ER nurse protest
MONTREAL — Quebec’s health minister says he is bringing in an external manager to try and resolve a labour dispute that forced a major Montreal hospital to partially close its emergency room Monday night.
A nurse-led protest over working conditions led officials to warn residents to stay away from the ER between 11 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. the next day. On Tuesday, Health Minister Christian Dubé told reporters the situation at the ER was “untenable,” adding, “many people have described the work environment as toxic.”
The situation had been simmering for days: on Friday, more than 90 of 115 nurses at the hospital’s ER signed a petition demanding the resignation of their unit chief, and many had reportedly threatened to resign en masse by the middle of this week. The nurses say they are exhausted by the amount of mandatory overtime they put in.
In response, Dubé said he and Jean-François Fortin-Verreault, head of the city’s east-end health authority, agreed to “bring someone from outside the (hospital) to come and continue to try to find solutions.”


