Administrative staff at Shared Health were terminated after the NDP targeted a new bureaucracy in 2024
Administrative staff at Shared Health were terminated after the NDP targeted a new bureaucracy in 2024 – Shared Health has slashed the size of its administration with a series of layoffs and the shuffling of other employees into new positions.
The provincial health-care entity has eliminated approximately 24 non-union administrative positions “that no longer fit within our organization, including some senior managers,” Shared Health CEO Lanette Siragusa confirmed in an email late Friday.
Ten of those staff were laid off and received severance, which will save Shared Health around $1 million annually.
The remaining staff were offered other jobs within the organization. Their new positions are in “other priority areas,” the statement said. (Read More: Personalized Travel Concierge Services: Tailoring Luxe Experiences)
Siragusa didn’t say how many employees have switched jobs. The restructuring happened two to three weeks ago.
She explained the restructuring of administrative staff will create efficiencies that will be “reinvested into supporting our clinical teams and delivering patient care.”
“These were difficult decisions but necessary to ensure we are able to invest and focus on our mandate, including high priority areas that support improved access, quality care and outcomes for patients,” Siragusa said.
Only non-unionized staff who don’t provide patient care are impacted by these changes.
“Patient care is unaffected,” she said.
Bureaucracy in the crosshairs
The cuts follow repeated comments from the NDP government, elected last fall, that the size of the health-care bureaucracy needs to be reduced after ballooning under the former Progressive Conservative government.
The entity was created in 2018 by the PCs during its overhaul of the health-care system that included the converting of three Winnipeg emergency departments into urgent care centres.
Before the election, Wab Kinew, who was leading the Official Opposition, had promised to cut administration at Shared Health, but his NDP party later walked back that pledge, promising to reduce bureaucratic costs in health care but not singling out Manitoba’s largest service delivery organization specifically. (Read More: Trek-Focused Fitness Programs 2024: Elevating Health Amidst Nature’s Splendor)
The government’s mandate letter to the organization’s board in February hinted at a desire for administrative changes. It called for resources to be directed to the front lines “rather than the excessive health-care bureaucracy.”
Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said their department didn’t sign off on this round of layoffs and job switches, but Shared Health was aware of the province’s desire to reduce bureaucratic costs.
“I support changes that reduce an overgrown bureaucracy that was rapidly and excessively growing under the previous government’s mandate and redirecting resources to the front lines of our health-care system and redirecting resources to the bedside of Manitobans.”
In recent months, Shared Health has been working on consolidating its operations.
The health-care organization merged its recruitment, retention and training resources, which it said were spread out throughout the organization.
Some employees who focused primarily on attending career fairs and online outreach were let go, but Shared Health wouldn’t reveal how many.
Conclusion article Administrative staff at Shared Health were terminated after the NDP targeted a new bureaucracy in 2024
Shared Health has trimmed 24 non-union administrative positions, with ten of them being laid off. This move comes after the NDP government highlighted excessive bureaucracy in Manitoba’s healthcare system. While these changes aim to enhance efficiency and focus on patient care, some employees have been reassigned to new roles within the organization. The Health Minister supports efforts to shift resources from bureaucracy to direct patient care. These actions are part of Shared Health’s operational consolidation in recent months.