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Doctors demand new Ontario Medical Association negotiators before talks resume

A Saskatoon doctor is restricted to practicing cosmetic medicine only within Saskatchewan. File / Getty Images

TORONTO — A group of doctors who led the fight against a new four-year fee agreement are demanding the Ontario Medical Association change its negotiating committee before resuming talks with the government.

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More than 63 per cent of OMA members who cast ballots voted against the tentative deal, which would have raised the $11.5-billion physician services budget by 2.5 per cent a year, to $12.9 billion by 2020.

READ MORE: OMA wants new negotiating mandate after doctors reject tentative fee deal

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The Coalition of Ontario Doctors, which represents several physician groups, says the “resounding rejection” of the fee agreement requires a change in the composition of the OMA’s committees responsible for negotiations.

The coalition says it’s concerned the OMA leadership is still ignoring “the will of its members by advocating for a similar agreement, a similar relations with government and a similar vision for the future of the profession.”

It issued a letter calling the OMA communications strategy “unfair, unbalanced and designed to support decisions made in secret by the (OMA) executive committee.”

READ MORE: Ontario doctors reject new four-year fee agreement with province

There has been no immediate response to the coalition’s demands from the OMA.

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Health Minister Eric Hoskins says he’s willing to give the OMA time to sort out its own internal issues before resuming negotiations on a fee agreement with the government.

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