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Ontario doctors vote on new fee agreement, 2.5 per cent fee hike each year

Doctors are voting Sunday on a new fee agreement reached by the Ontario Medical Association and the provincial government. File / Getty Images

TORONTO – Doctors vote today on a new fee agreement reached by the Ontario Medical Association and the government, with some urging their colleagues to reject it.

The four-year deal would increase Ontario’s $11.5-billion physician services budget by 2.5 per cent a year, to $12.9 billion by 2020, and allows doctors to co-manage the system with the Ministry of Health.

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The Liberal government imposed fee cuts for some doctors’ services last year, but the new agreement promises no more unilateral cuts over the four years.

However, some doctors are angry that the OMA failed to get agreement on binding arbitration, although the association will continue to fight for that right in court.

The group Concerned Ontario Doctors staged rallies and protest marches urging physicians to vote against the deal, warning it doesn’t provide adequate funding to provide the services patients need.

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Radiologist Dr. David Jacobs, chair of diagnostic imaging for the OMA, says no one is asking for a raise from themselves, and what they really want is better funding of health care.

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