Members of the group are:
- Richard Steele, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Long-Term Care
- Helen Angus, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Health
- Bernadette Beaupre, Executive Director, The Ontario Association of Adult and Continuing Education School Board of Administrators
- Anne Coghlan, Executive Director and CEO, College of Nurses
- Chris Conway, Career Colleges Ontario
- Donna Duncan, CEO, Ontario Long-Term Care Association
- Linda Franklin, President and CEO, Colleges Ontario
- Miranda Ferrier, CEO and Provincial President, Ontario Personal Support Workers Association
- Doris Grinspun, CEO, Registered Nurses Association Ontario
- Lisa Levin, CEO, AdvantAge Ontario
- Dianne Martin, CEO, Registered Practical Nurses Association of Ontario (WeRPN)
- Greg Meredith, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development
- Nancy Naylor, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Education
- Steve Orsini, President and CEO, Council of Ontario Universities
- JP Roszell, National Association of Career Colleges
- Shelley Tapp, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Colleges and Universities
“There is an urgent need to accelerate and expand the training and education of personal support workers, registered practical nurses, and registered nurses to meet the targets we set in the long-term care staffing plan,” said Dr. Merrilee Fullerton, Minister of Long-Term Care. “I am pleased to support this group as we work to solve the long-standing and systemic challenges in our sector.”
The group will help to increase long-term care staffing supply by expanding and accelerating education and training for personal support workers, registered practical nurses and registered nurses. Task teams will be established to focus on four priorities beginning in 2021-22:
- building an “Earn-as-you-Learn” personal support worker learning pathway that will include on-the-job education onsite training and micro-credentialing;
- bridging opportunities for personal support workers to become accredited registered practical nurses and registered practical nurses to become registered nurses, to provide career progression pathways and accelerate the supply of registered practical nurses and registered nurses;
- increasing enrolment and accelerate completion of existing training programs in support of the long-term care workforce; and
- removing barriers to enable more internationally-trained professionals to become qualified to practice in Ontario.
The Staffing Supply Accelerator Group will begin meeting this month and will operate for at least one year. The group will be assessed after the first six months and every six months following.