The government of Quebec announced it will pay close to $5.2 million to religious communities in the province so that they can offer bonuses to members of their staff who work in their infirmaries.
Marguerite Blais, Quebec’s minister responsible for seniors and caregivers, announced June 8 the financial assistance “will be provided to these communities on an emergency basis.”
She added the bonuses would be retroactive to March 13, 2020.
The announcement came after Sister Celine Dupuis, co-provincial of the Sisters of Saint Anne, said six of their nuns had died of COVID-19 in Lachine, Que.; this was five more deaths than what the official government data shows.
In Trois-Rivieres, halfway between Montreal and Quebec, seven Ursuline sisters have died of COVID-19. Other orders also have been affected.
“It’s a lot in a short time,” said Sister Cecile Dionne, superior general of the Canadian Union of the Ursulines. “It is a difficult context, which we share with all our brothers and sisters in humanity. All families experience it. For some, it is their father, their grandmother. For us, it’s our sisters.”
Marjaurie Cote-Boileau of the seniors and caregivers ministry noted the money would “not go directly to religious communities, but to their caregivers.”
“The sisters take care of vulnerable people,” she said. “They are important to our government.”
Since the beginning of the health crisis, religious congregations in Quebec have repeated that they have been forgotten by the government as they take care of their members who are over 70 years old and that their convents and houses are, for the most part, not recognized as residences for the elderly.
Since the announcement of bonuses offered to public sector staff, religious communities, unable to provide comparable wages and conditions, have reported losing employees.
Under the new arrangement, attendants who work in the communities’ infirmaries will receive a bonus of $4 per hour worked. Nurses and nursing assistants will receive a premium of eight per hour worked. The other categories of personnel, excluding managers, will receive a bonus of four per cent per hour worked, said Cote-Boileau.
The Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Anne has 300 religious sisters in Canada, the United States and Haiti. In Quebec, there are 180 Sisters of Saint Anne. The vast majority live at the motherhouse in Lachine.
Two-thirds of Canada’s religious sisters, brothers and priests live in Quebec. In 2014, the Canadian Religious Conference calculated that 94 per cent of Canadian religious were over 60 years of age.
In Quebec, 56 infirmaries house members of religious communities.
–Gloutnay is on the staff on Presence info, based in Montreal