in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, M ay 3 ,2 01 8 |24 c o m m u n it y Affordable prescription drug coverage discussed at CLC event Graham Paine/Metroland Above, left: Marjorie Knight of the Ontario Health Coalition talks with fellow panel member Reverend Dr. Mervyn Russell during the Canadian Labour Council's Pharmacare Town Hall in Oakville. Above: The audience listens to a speaker at the Canadian Labour Congress's Pharmacare Town Hall. In its continuing efforts toward affordable drug coverage, the Canadian La bour Congress recently held a pharmacare town hall in Oakville. The April 12 event pro vided information on bringing affordable health coverage to seniors in the community. Currently, 3.5 million Canadians cannot afford to fill their prescriptions - some compensating by splitting their pills or skip ping days to make them last longer. In attendance was Has- san Yussuff, a Canadian la bour leader and president o f the Canadian Labour Congress. Last fall, the CLC launched a national cam paign calling for pharma- care that would cover all Canadians, regardless of their age, income or where they work or live. It's pan Canadian pharmacare town hall tour has so far visited about two dozen communities and gar nered nearly 50,000 peti tion signatures and almost 7,000 emails to members of Parliament. Yussuff said prescrip tion drugs are the fastest- growing payroll cost em ployers are facing. "They have no control over medication costs right now," he said. "Any em ployer w ill tell you that to have a national formulary . w ill certainly be huge for them." Oakville MP John Oli ver was also on hand. He's served as the president and chief executive officer of numerous hospitals in cluding Georgetown and District Memorial Hospital and Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. Oliver spoke about the importance o f a pharma- care plan, noting that cre ating such a national pro gram was the main reason he entered federal politics. "For me it's simple: no Canadian should be denied access to necessary pre- scription medicines be cause they can't afford it," said Oliver, who was also president and CEO of Hal- ton Healthcare for more than 20 years before he en tered into politics. "I saw first-hand the immense need for pharmacare in Canada. We are the only country in the world with a national health-care sys tem that does not also have a pharmacare program, and that needs to change." According to a media re lease issued by Oliver's of fice, one in four Canadians cannot afford to fill or fin- • See UNITED, page 37 OSC YOUTH SUMMER HOUSE LEAGUE SOCCER TO REGISTER, OR FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE VISIT: WWW.OAKVILLESOCCER.CA OR CALL 905-849-4436 http://WWW.OAKVILLESOCCER.CA