Thank you, Madam Chair. I appreciate the department’s answers to all these questions and I appreciate the Minister’s responses as well. I guess this is the beginning of the process that, when coming into this job, I thought I might find it frustrating being in private business where we implement stuff a little quicker than the government, and this is one area that I think is lacking with our government system, and it’s in the area of midwifery.
The Minister has asked why we’re so concerned about trying to implement things quickly and trying to move things ahead. It’s basically because I think most Members here and the general public are concerned and frustrated with the system the way things are set up. Midwifery is already set up in Fort Smith. In Yellowknife they stopped the process, did a study, which took them a long time to do, re-established it in Fort Smith and that study indicated this is what we should suggest for implementation. Now we’re given that we need to create a bureaucracy where we have a coordinator the first year, then the second year we go into Hay River, the third year we go into Inuvik and Behchoko, then the fourth year we’ll go into other communities like
Yellowknife and Norman Wells and other potential sites. So I think the area of timelines is the fact that we’re seeing a project, something that’s been assessed, something that we did a study on, and now we’re looking at implementing it over four years. Why can’t we do a coordinator and implement Hay River in the same year, if that’s the wish of the department or if that’s the way it’s going to go forward? Why can’t we multi-task in this system?
So, as I indicated, I respect the department’s hard work, but I think we should be implementing this quicker. This is what people want. The Minister has asked why we want this so quickly. I’ve been in this House, I’ve shown people sitting in this Legislative Assembly, friends of mine waiting to have a baby in Yellowknife. We want to have babies in our communities and the Minister knows that. These are people that are, you know, the one person it was her third child. She’s got a husband waiting in Yellowknife, she’s got kids waiting in Hay River and she’s got family in Hay River waiting to have a child. That’s why we’re looking to implement this.
So we are frustrated with the system and I’m glad to hear that Fort Smith is doing well, and I know the percentages go up when you have a full-time position and I know the department is working on that stuff. The timeline is also due to the fact that we know once we say, okay, we’re going to implement this in Hay River, it’s going to take just about a year to implement it. So if we’re going to wait a year to do it in Hay River, that means you’re two and a half years from now from actually having a midwife in place and operational. I know that our authority is interested in putting in a new facility, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t have somebody lined up, the hiring process, the review process of that person, the implementation in the authority needs to be in place, as well, for that new facility, and no different in Inuvik or Behchoko.
So the timelines just get extended and extended. Now we’ve got to do more studies, we’ve got to do more implementation, we’ve got to study it some more. That just drags it out. So this four years for Yellowknife to be implemented in the fourth year may take five years. Like, is that reasonable for people, where the program was already in place, to expect them to see that?
I’m just really frustrated with the government system and the fact that we’re implementing something that is operational in Fort Smith. It’s something that was operational before. We have done a study. Now we allow it. It just frustrates me to no end that we’re doing this.
The other area that people are concerned with, and we’re no different, Mr. Yakeleya talked about the short time and attention span of the government. This Legislative Assembly is interested in midwifery, but the next one to two and a half years
may not have an interest in it. It may fall off the map. He’s had issues where it was a hot button item, and then the next Assembly it gets dropped and it’s not being implemented anymore. That’s why people are interested in it being implemented now, not as opposed to later. I think we’re very interested in seeing some of these things implemented right away.
Like I talked about the hiring, we know, through physicians, that it takes a while to hire physicians. Your midwives are the same way, training. But let’s get this process going now as opposed to hiring a coordinator the one year, having that person do, a manager or coordinator doing something when there’s no staff there and no midwives to coordinate. So what’s the coordinator doing? Let’s implement them at the same time, if that’s the wish of the department to have a coordinator. I question whether we need a coordinator or not. I’m just saying, if the department wants to do that, let’s do it the same year.
The other issue that is frustrating with me is the department talks about midwifery implemented in Hay River will be regional. We’re going to use the other parts of the communities. That’s fine, that’s a great concept, but Hay River is funded not as a regional hospital. It’s a community health centre. We’re not only funded that way operational-wise, but we’re funded that way capital-wise. When they’re building this new facility, it’s not a regional hospital; it’s a community centre. Now the department is talking about bringing things into the regional. Now we in Hay River are being asked to do more capacity with less infrastructure money and less operational money.
If the department wants to do this, I want to make sure the department knows that Hay River wants to be funded for this. If the dollars we’re getting now are going to be the same dollars we get when we have to do a regional implementation of midwifery, that’s more burdensome on our system and it impacts the community of Hay River.
I’m very frustrated with the system. I don’t really know if I have any questions for the Minister other than a statement of frustration with the way this thing is being implemented.