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Ontario Government (Conservative majority), 2025-29






North region
Thunder Bay (25)
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North Bay-Parry Sound (14)
Northwestern (16)
Northeastern (15)
Algoma (1)

East region
Eastern Ontario (5)
Ottawa (17)
Renfrew County (20)
South East (22)

Southwest region
Huron Perth/Oxford Elgin St. Thomas (10)
Southwestern (23)
Lambton (11)
Middlesex-London (12)
Chatham-Kent (2)
Windsor-Essex County (28)
Grey-Bruce (7)
Grand Erie (6)



Yes - I heard of that. Too bad it came a little late for our daughter. She went to university in the north and stayed, so she (we) could have saved some coin in tuition.

I think the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (Sudbury/TBay) has something similar.

When you said "staff", I thought you were referring to Ontario civil servants. The OPP now has quite generous posting allowances for the north, amounts vary by location. When I was working, the 'duration posting allowance' might have bought a case of beer after taxes.
 
Yes - I heard of that. Too bad it came a little late for our daughter. She went to university in the north and stayed, so she (we) could have saved some coin in tuition.

Regarding the Ontario Learn and Stay program.

The Ontario Association of Paramedic Chiefs (OAPC) said the province still relies on a two-year college diploma that tries to compress three years of education. Many colleges are now pushing to replace the two-year diploma proram with a three-year undergraduate degree.

More than half fail.

Right now, they only get so many college seats per year. And when more than half the students fail, that cuts our graduates in half. They’re saying, ‘Give us an extra year, and we can get graduation rates close to 100 per cent by giving students the time and support they need.’”

With more than half failing the two-year diploma program, that cuts the graduates by more than half.

OAPC wants it to be a three-year program.

I think its also a good idea to educate students on what they are getting into - before they get fed into the 9-1-1 system.

Is Queen's Park ready to ante up for three years tuition. Or, go cheap with two?
 
Regarding the Ontario Learn and Stay program.

The Ontario Association of Paramedic Chiefs (OAPC) said the province still relies on a two-year college diploma that tries to compress three years of education. Many colleges are now pushing to replace the two-year diploma proram with a three-year undergraduate degree.

More than half fail.



With more than half failing the two-year diploma program, that cuts the graduates by more than half.

OAPC wants it to be a three-year program.

I think its also a good idea to educate students on what they are getting into - before they get fed into the 9-1-1 system.

Is Queen's Park ready to ante up for three years tuition. Or, go cheap with two?
There's a difference between a 3-year diploma course and an undergrad program. What would two more semesters do to improve the graduation rate? Less intencity?
 
There's a difference between a 3-year diploma course and an undergrad program. What would two more semesters do to improve the graduation rate? Less intencity?

Not sure exactly why the fail rate is 60 per cent.

I read it in this article in the Sault Star.


Sage said the province still relies on a two-year college diploma that tries to compress three years of material. The fail rate is 60 per cent.

Greg Sage, president of the Ontario Association of Paramedic Chiefs

I know Greg from when he worked in Toronto.
 
Not sure exactly why the fail rate is 60 per cent.

I read it in this article in the Sault Star.




Greg Sage, president of the Ontario Association of Paramedic Chiefs

I know Greg from when he worked in Toronto.
They can still work privately, they just can't call themselves paramedics. There are companies who employee them along with EMRs.
 
They can still work privately, they just can't call themselves paramedics.

The Chiefs put it this way,

There are no paramedics that work in mines or no paramedics that work in the Ring of Fire, or in in heavy industry, Because to work as a paramedic in Ontario, you have to be working for a paramedic service in a 911 capacity.
 
The Chiefs put it this way,
To be fair, the only people working in the Ring of Fire right now are a bunch of drilling crews living in tents or trailers.

I'm still unclear how making it a degree program would make anything better. Adding the elements/subjects that would be mandated by the various governing bodies would likely add to the load. It might well go the way of law enforcement diploma and degree programs. Ever since the programs have been taken over by academics instead of staff familiar with the industry they are supposed to be feeding, police services have become les and less impressed with the product.

I was surprised to learn that Emergency Medical Responders still exist in some areas of northern Ontario (basic CPR/FA + AED). Usually part of the local VFD - which themselves can be pretty small - but not always. A lot of unorganized townships lack even those.
 
To be fair, the only people working in the Ring of Fire right now are a bunch of drilling crews living in tents or trailers.

I'm still unclear how making it a degree program would make anything better. Adding the elements/subjects that would be mandated by the various governing bodies would likely add to the load. It might well go the way of law enforcement diploma and degree programs. Ever since the programs have been taken over by academics instead of staff familiar with the industry they are supposed to be feeding, police services have become les and less impressed with the product.

I was surprised to learn that Emergency Medical Responders still exist in some areas of northern Ontario (basic CPR/FA + AED). Usually part of the local VFD - which themselves can be pretty small - but not always. A lot of unorganized townships lack even those.
slight side-track but perhaps germane to the discussion. The certification exam taken by an RPN is for all intents a duplicate of the one taken by an RN in Ontario. Perhaps going to a 3 year programme is another way of trying to justify universities instead of colleges without gaining any real advantage. The same process has been followed for teachers too.
 
I'm still unclear how making it a degree program would make anything better.

I don't know either.

Yet, here we are,

U of T

Students in Paramedicine earn an Honours Bachelor of Science degree

Students in Paramedicine earn an Honours Bachelor of Science degree and an Ontario College Diploma while learning from leading academics and professionals. This program, unique in Canada, prepares students for the Ontario Ministry of Health Advanced Emergency Medical Care Attendant (AEMCA) exam.

At least you can graduate from the above, and put it behind you.

But, for the rest of your career on 9-1-1 Operations, you'll be at the mercy of the two below

1) The Department's own Eduction staff,


2) The Medical Director at the Centre of Prehospital Medicine. Aka "Dr. G#d".

I was fortunately "grandfathered" by the time Recruiting became a whole new ball game on 1 August, 1975.

That's when college became mandatory to apply. All I had was high school. The dept. eventually sent us to college.

It was voluntary. I think it was basically a "no-fail". Because, even if you did, they couldn't fire you.

We loved college. It was fun. And best of all , it got us off Operations. At least for a while.

We got scolded by one of our classmates ( a Deputy Chief ) about setting a bad example drinking at lunchtime.

When we wrote our finals, a pencil went flying across the room as he exclaimed, What do they think we are?! A bunch of f#$cking doctors!" LOL

From what I have heard from the Chiefs at our pensioner luncheons, where they keep us up to date on what's new, is that colleges don't prepare candidates for the call volume.

I know that was my biggest shock when I hired on.
 
slight side-track but perhaps germane to the discussion. The certification exam taken by an RPN is for all intents a duplicate of the one taken by an RN in Ontario. Perhaps going to a 3 year programme is another way of trying to justify universities instead of colleges without gaining any real advantage. The same process has been followed for teachers too.
But I assume they have different scopes of practice.

In Ontario, a teaching certificate (BEd) used to be one year after undergrad, then it went to two (four semesters). Now they are proposing something in the middle; three semesters in 12 months.
 
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