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September 17, 2002
Carney Hospital RNs To Hold Informational
Picket on Sept. 18th
from 2 - 6 pm As Contract Talks Stall Over Salary, Health Insurance,
and Contract Takeaways
Carney Nurses' Pay Scale is Lowest in Region
DORCHESTER, Mass.—Registered
nurses at Carney Hospital in Dorchester will hold an informational
picket outside the entrance to the facility on Wednesday, Sept.
18, 2002 from 2 - 6 p.m., as contract talks continue to stall
over salary, health insurance and the hospital's demand that
the nurses give back a number of existing contract benefits to
fund their own raises.
While Carney Hospital nurses are among the lowest
paid nurses in the Greater Boston area, they have been able to
maintain a low vacancy rate and retain an experienced nursing
staff because of the package of benefits provided by its strong
union contract. Now the hospital is seeking to cut a number of
benefits in the contract and increase the nurses' health insurance
costs by 10% while offering a salary increase that will keep
Carney well below the market for nurses.
The Carney Hospital contract dispute comes at a
time when the health care industry is in the midst of a growing
national shortage of nurses, which was driven by a decade where
nurses saw a dramatic increase in their patient assignments,
a deterioration of their working conditions, and pay rates that
have remained virtually flat.
Here in Massachusetts, hospitals are now scrambling
to recruit sufficient numbers of registered nurses from a very
small pool of nurses still willing to work under current conditions.
Nurses, frustrated with their pay and working conditions, are
moving from facility to facility in search of the best environment.
"We have fought long and hard for a contract that
does everything hospitals are attempting to do in the face of
a nursing shortage, which is to retain a high quality nursing
staff," said Marie Murray, tri-chair of the nurses' bargaining
unit at Carney. "If they weaken our existing contract and fail
to bring us in line with competing hospitals, we are in danger
of losing valuable staff, which will impact the quality of care
we deliver."
More than 275 nurses are represented by the Massachusetts
Nurses Association at Carney Hospital. They have been negotiating
their contract since June 21, 2001, with seven negotiating sessions
held to date. The nurses' contract will expire on November 1,
2002. The nurses submitted the required notice to picket the
hospital at the end of their negotiating session on Sept. 6,
2002. Nurses at the facility are outraged by the hospital's stance
in the negotiations.
Currently, the nurses' salaries are up to 7% below
their counterparts at Faulkner Hospital, Quincy Medical Center
and Caritas Norwood Hospital. In comparison to Boston teaching
hospitals, Carney salaries are as much as 20% less.
Adding to the nurses' frustration is the fact that
they have worked with the hospital over the years to hold down
their salary demands to help the facility survive troubled times.
In May of 2001, hospital management asked the nurses to accept
admittedly meager pay increases to help it maneuver out of its
financial troubles at the time.
"They told us to help them out and when the boat
was turned around, the nurses would be rewarded," Murray said. "Well,
now the hospital is back on its feet, yet they have failed to
honor their promise to the nurses."
The hospital is offering the nurses only 10.5%
over 3 ½ years, which will keep them well behind nurses at surrounding
hospitals.
In addition, they have tied any offer of a raise
to the nurses' agreement to make significant reductions in their
benefits package. The hospital has proposed limits on vacation
and sick time accruals, freezing current vacation accruals at
current pay rates, reducing their on call pay benefits, while
increasing the nurses' co-payments for health insurance by 10%.
"Management is asking the Carney nurses to fund
their own pay increases by decreasing existing benefits. This
is not only unreasonable, it is an insult to every nurse at this
facility who has sacrificed to ensure this hospital's very survival," Murray
added.
Dispute is Manifestation of Broader Crisis
The contract dispute at Carney Hospital is one
being played out at a number of facilities across the state in
the wake of a growing nursing shortage in the Commonwealth. Similar
job actions have been called for by nurses at MNA local bargaining
units at Brigham & Women's Hospital and Cape Cod Hospital.
While Massachusetts has the highest population
of nurses in the nation (over 82,000 RNs licensed by the state),
we are experiencing a serious shortage of nurses willing to work
at the hospital bedside. A recent survey of Massachusetts nurses
found that while 81% were working in nursing, only 46% (an estimated
37,000) are working at the hospital bedside, and more than half
of those nurses are working part time.
According to Julie Pinkham, executive director
of the MNA, "The current shortage of nurses was created by the
bad policies of the health care industry and made worse by consistent
mistreatment of its nursing staff over the last 15 years. Nurses
are just plain tired of being taken advantage of."
Throughout the 1990s, hospitals laid off thousands
of nurses and/or replaced them with unlicensed personnel in an
attempt to cut costs under managed care. Also, under managed
care, only the sickest patients made it into the hospital. Nurses
at the bedside saw their patient assignments increase while their
patients were sicker, requiring more intensive nursing care.
At many hospitals, managers compensated for inadequate staffing
levels by using mandatory overtime as a mechanism for staffing
their facilities.
Not only did these conditions impact nurses, those
who suffer most under current conditions are patients. A number
of recent studies, including one published this May in the New
England Journal of Medicine and a more recent report by the Joint
Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals, shows that inadequate
RN staffing is causing serious harm to patients, including increases
in complications, an increase in medical errors and thousands
of patient deaths each year.
A recent national survey of nurses by the federal
government found that nurses have the lowest job satisfaction
of any employee group surveyed by the government. Staff nurses
in hospitals and in nursing homes have the lowest job satisfaction
of all, which is due to poor working conditions and low pay.
The same survey found nursing salaries have been stagnant since
1993.
Nursing is also one of the most dangerous professions.
Nurses and nurses aides have the highest claims rate for back
injuries of any profession. The injury and illness rate for nurses
and other health care personnel surpasses that of mining. Nurses
and other health care personnel are three times more likely than
the general public to contract Hepatitis C, and nurses suffer
assaults and workplace violence on a par with police officers
and prison guards.
To address the issue of poor working conditions
and dangerous staffing levels, nurses are turning to the legislature
and fighting for passage of legislation similar to what was recently
passed in California, which would regulate RN-to-patient ratios.
The regulation of nurse staffing is essential to retaining the
current workforce, and to enticing those that have left the bedside
to return.
"Unless and until the RN-to-patient ratio legislation
is passed and working conditions throughout the state's hospitals
are improved, the wages for the nurse willing to work in this
environment must be addressed immediately."
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