Thursday, December 13, 2007

Proposed Federal Legislation to Protect Paramedics

On December 12, 2007 Liberal Member of Parliament Mario Silva introduced a Private Members Bill in the House of Commons to amend the Criminal Code of Canada. Bill C-495, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (emergency medical services workers) would make it an indictable offence to assault "an emergency medical services worker engaged in the execution of his or her duty".

Bill C-495 was introduced by Mr. Silva following an outcry from paramedics across the country. Earlier this year Silva proposed another Criminal Code amendment making it an offence to assault firefighters in the line of duty. The fact that the proposed bill did not also recognize the dangers faced by EMS personnel resulted in correspondence and calls not only to Mr. Silva's office and staff but to many other MPs as well. In a letter addressed to Canada's Paramedics, Silva (Opposition Critic for Labour Issues) indicated that he planned to draft legislation that would include paramedics in the same context as police and firefighters within the Criminal Code.

When this issue first came to light, staff from Silva's Ottawa office called to discuss the concerns raised by paramedics and apologize for the oversight of paramedics in the original draft. The error, they admitted, was due to a lack of understanding that paramedics were not necessarily included in the firefighter ranks. They immediately asked that we help them rectify this situation by providing a definition of paramedic that would be suitable for use in subsequent legislation. As Chairman of the
Paramedic Association of Canada Board of Directors, I undertook to coordinate that effort.

Through consultation with various stakeholders, including the PAC Board and Chapter members as well as the EMS Chiefs of Canada, we arrived at the definition of emergency medical services worker that has been used in Bill C-495. The challenge was to make it narrow enough that it clearly represented practitioners associated with PAC and yet broad enough that it didn't exclude practitioners by restricting it to titles not recognized by some jurisdictions and was inclusive of practitioners working in many of the non-traditional EMS roles we are starting to see across the country. That process proved to be somewhat more difficult than originally anticipated, but was vital to moving forward with planning the proposed legislation.

Both PAM and PAC will continue to follow Bill C-495 in the coming weeks and months. You can read the proposed legislation and follow it's status on the Parliament of Canada web site.

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