Unionized faculty, staff at NOSM to begin mediation talks
Unionized faculty and professional staff at NOSM University represented by the NOSM U Faculty and Staff Association (NUFSA) along with members of OPSEU Local 677 have agreed to enter provincially mediated conciliation with the school’s administration starting Friday.
Last month, NUFSA members voted 100 per cent in favour of a strike mandate.
NUFSA and the university administration “remain far apart on important issues of job security,” the union said in a news release Thursday – adding they are entering conciliation with strong community and student support.
In order to make “their dissatisfaction with the administration’s position clear,” the union has encouraged members and their supporters to send emails to NOSM U's senior administration through their website.
NUFSA said that the administration has already received more than 1,325 emails expressing support for a fair contract in line with other Ontario medical schools.
The union said administration has not provided a response to emails.
“Clearly, the community is concerned that the University administration remains at odds with supporting a vision of NOSM U as a public university in Canada with an equitable workload, learning and research conditions that are the same as other medical schools,” said NUFSA president Darrel Manitowabi, in the release.
“The administration’s ongoing refusal to engage in meaningful dialogue with NUFSA has the potential to compromise the quality of medical education in northern Ontario.”
NUFSA said they are calling on the administration to demonstrate a willingness to use the conciliation process to negotiate a fair collective agreement that benefits faculty, staff, students and the northern Ontario community at large.
- Download the CTV News app now and get local alerts on your device
- Get local breaking news and updates sent to your email inbox
“The working conditions of NOSM University faculty and staff are the learning conditions of students, and ultimately, the care conditions of the people of northern Ontario,” said student Alanna Makinson.
“If NOSMU’s administration values training the next generation of doctors, they must show it through fair pay and benefits, and working conditions for the staff that do that work.”
CTV News reached out the NOSM U’s administration for comment on negotiations and the upcoming mediation and is awaiting a response as of the time of this publication.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

These food items will continue to be 'volatile' in price next year: report
A new report by more than 30 researchers is estimating how much food will cost in 2024 and how much money it will take to feed families.
Putin moves a step closer to a 5th term as president after Russia sets 2024 election date
Lawmakers in Russia set the country's 2024 presidential election for March 17, moving Vladimir Putin a step closer to a fifth term in office.
Are you pronouncing that right? Most mispronounced words and names in 2023
Some of the words tied to this year's hottest topics were also among the most mangled when it came to saying them aloud
Strikes on Gaza's southern edge sow fear in one of the last areas to which people can flee
Israeli forces struck the southern Gaza town of Rafah twice overnight, residents said Thursday, sowing fear in one of the last places where civilians could seek refuge after Israel widened its offensive against Hamas to areas already packed with displaced people.
Assembly of First Nations assembly continues without electing new national chief
The Assembly of First Nations' special chiefs assembly continues in Ottawa Thursday without a new national chief.
'I'm so broken': Grieving family speaks out after B.C. cancer patient awaiting treatment chooses MAID
A devastated family says long waits for cancer treatment led a beloved father and grandfather to choose medically assisted death 13 days ago.
These are the 5 headlines you should read this morning
A gunman kills three people on a Las Vegas school campus, Pierre Poilievre threatens to delay MPs' holidays and a Saskatchewan veteran receives France's highest order of distinction. Here's what you need to know to start your day.
A Netherlands court sets a sentencing date for a man convicted in Canada of cyberbullying
A court in the Netherlands said Thursday that it would rule in two weeks on the sentence for a man convicted in Canada in a notorious cyberbullying case.
St. John's airport reopens after investigation into suspicious package
The international airport in St. John's, Newfoundland, has been closed following the discovery of a suspicious package.