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Conflict of interest in air
ambulance privatization?
Dave Kirkham, HSAA
The Health Sciences Association of Alberta (HSAA) has asked
the Ethics Commissioner to determine if Peace River MLA Gary Friedel was in a
conflict of interest over the awarding of an air ambulance contract.
Friedel has admitted he wrote a letter of reference for
Advanced Paramedic Limited, a private company that was awarded an air ambulance
contract. However, Friedel was also a member of a committee that made the
decision on the contract.
"This puts Friedel in a conflict of interest," said
HSAA president Elisabeth Ballermann. "After having written the letter,
Friedel should have had the sense to decline the appointment to the selection
committee. It’s clear the MLA exercised poor judgment."
"This implies that if you have friends in high places,
you can win government contracts. Friedel’s actions have tainted what should
be an open, fair and objective process," Ballermann added.
HSAA urges Gary Mar, the minister of Health and Wellness, to
overturn the decision and appoint an unbiased board so that Albertans have
confidence that the system of awarding government contracts is fair and
impartial.
HSAA also believes the move to privatize the air ambulance
service is short-sighted.
"The decision is driven by the Klein government’s
ideology that privatization is cheaper and more efficient than the public
system. The current non-profit ambulance delivery by PREMS (Peace Regional
Emergency Medical Services) provides a highly efficient and integrated
service," Ballermann said.
"PREMS currently has the flexibility and depth by
interchanging air and ground crews to cover calls. The government has now driven
a wedge between the air and ground service removing that flexibility. It’s
clear the government is only looking at the immediate bottom line. What’s not
clear is the long-term viability of this private operator and whether the
company will require additional funds later," Ballermann concluded.
HSAA represents PREMS ambulance employees as well as more than 12,000
professional, technical, and support workers in the health care system.
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