Montreal

Public sector strikes in Montreal and Laval: What services are affected?

Teachers, health care professionals, court clerks and other public sector employees in Montreal and Laval strike Thursday. Here's a guide to what essential services will be offered.

Teachers and health care workers among those holding walkouts in Quebec's two largest cities Thursday

Expect delays or cancellations in non-essential health care services in Montreal and Laval on Thursday, as public sector workers stage a one-day strike. (Shutterstock)

Montreal and Laval will be the last regions to be affected this week by a public sector walkout in a series of rotating strikes.

A mix of civil servants – teachers, health-care professionals, court clerks and other public sector employees – are protesting against stalled negotiations with the provincial government.

Schools and CEGEPs will be closed across Montreal and Laval.

In the health-care sector, essential services will be provided.

For non-emergency or outpatient services, patients can expect delays or possible cancellations.

Thursday's strike could affect care in hospitals, CLSCs, long-term care institutions, and French-language youth and family services. (Batshaw youth and family centres are not affected by the strike.)

Here is a guide to what health care and social services are affected tomorrow:

Critical or essential services

By law, Quebec hospitals must maintain a 100 per cent working capacity in emergency rooms and intensive care units.

Unionized health-care professionals in these departments must ensure that there is no reduction in patient care.

Specialized services and hospitals

Hospitals that offer specialized services must operate at 90 per cent during a strike mandate. Specialized services include psychiatric care, cardiology and neurology. 

Specialized hospitals that have departments that offer community care or clinical psychiatric care must also have 90 per cent of their workforce in place.

Other hospital services

During a strike, non-specialized hospitals must operate at 80 per cent capacity.

Outpatient appointments are considered non-essential. That means those patients in Laval and Montreal with scheduled appointments on Thursday can expect delays and possibly cancellations. Staff levels could be reduced.

Shelters, rehabilitation centres and long-term care facilities

These centres must operate at 90 per cent capacity during a walkout. Expect some reductions in staffing.