Your friends and family will want to know what you’ve been up to this past year, so it’s the perfect time to let them know everything you have done to fight for better seniors’ care. Let’s take pride in our campaign.
If everyone speaks with two people this holiday season about why we’re passionate about seniors’ care and how they can help, our movement will continue to grow and get results.
Your voice matters. Here are some key messages and tips to help change hearts and minds this holiday season.
Connect: Lead with your values
When it comes to seniors’ care, the vast majority of British Columbians are in support of more and better care. When you’re talking with friends and family, make sure to lead with our shared values so they see our point of view:
Problem: Build your case for seniors’ care
Friends and family might not know about the state of seniors’ care in B.C. Highlight the issue at hand. Here are five key points that can help make them aware of the problem:
Solution: Tell them what we’re fighting for
We’re taking a solutions-focused approach to seniors’ care. Show how these solutions can help fix seniors’ care. Let family & friends know that we’re fighting for:
Action: Invite them to help
Impactful conversations can help change hearts and minds. If your friend or family member cares as much about seniors’ care as you do, invite them to take action:
Tips:
FAQ & Challenges
You might run into challenges or misconceptions while talking about seniors’ care with family and friends. Here are some commonly asked questions, and how to address them.
Question: How did seniors’ care get so bad in the first place?
Response: The former BC Liberal government cut, privatized, and reduced regulations in care homes. This undermined working and caring conditions. The pandemic worsened the situation by placing extra pressure on residents, staff, and families.
Question: Didn’t the government already take care of this?
Response: The government has started to help seniors’ care by hiring more workers, improving funding, standardizing wages and taking measures to stabilize care. But we have to hold them accountable to see all of their commitments through. That means keeping pressure on by writing letters, signing petitions, and more.
Question: How is online action effective?
Response: Loud, continuous support keeps an issue top of mind for the public, and for elected officials. You can do it from home, often in less than a minute. Speaking out on social media can help make others aware of and care about the problem. There are a lot of issues out there, so appealing to your local MLA in an email reminds them that fixing seniors’ care is important.
Question: This is just about workers wanting more pay, isn’t it?
Response: Years of low wages, heavy workloads, and pandemic burnout mean front-line healthcare workers are leaving their jobs in record numbers. This impacts the care seniors are receiving. Recently government standardized wages, so staff earn the same amount no matter which facility they work at, but benefits, and working conditions, can still vary from site to site. It’s not enough to hire more workers — we must keep them by ensuring decent benefits and working conditions at every care home. It’s the only way to make sure seniors have the care they need when they need it.
Question: What’s wrong with for-profit care facilities?
Response: B.C.’s Seniors’ Advocate, in her recent report, found that for-profit care homes doubled their profits during the pandemic. On top of that, for-profit care home operators failed to deliver 500,000 hours of care even though they received the government funds to deliver that care.
Question: What’s wrong with contracting out?
Response: Subcontracting care and support services leads to less accountability, more fragmented services, and less stable staffing. It can disrupt the continuity of care for seniors and their families. And it introduces another layer of profit-taking into publicly-funded seniors’ care.