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11.10.2006
M E D I A A D V I S O R Y
Brigham & Women’s Hospital RNs
to Take Strike Authorization Vote on Nov. 13
Will Hold Press Conference on Nov. 14th at 10 a.m. to Announce Vote
Result
As Contract Talks Stall Over Issues of Union Rights, Poor Staffing
Levels,
Overburdening of New Nurses and Wages
Strike vote will take place throughout the
day and late into the evening on Monday, Nov. 13 at the hospital
as well as at MNA Headquarters in Canton
Nurses will hold a press conference on Tuesday, Nov. 14
at 10 a.m. outside the hospital’s main entrance (corner of
Francis and Binney Sts.) to announce the result
The 2,700 registered nurses of Brigham & Women’s Hospital
(BWH) will take a strike authorization vote on Monday, Nov. 13,
2006 as contract talks continue to stall over a number of issues
the nurses believe compromise their ability to advocate for patients,
as well as to recruit and retain staff needed to safely care for
patients. The vote to strike is being fueled by chronically poor
staffing levels at the facility, which are threatening the safety
of the patients and causing a high turnover of staff on a number
of floors. Key issues in dispute include:
- Union Rights – The hospital is refusing to agree to contract
language that protects union rights for nurses at the facility
and their ability to advocate for patients. The proposed contract
language, the first of its kind in Massachusetts, is designed
to prevent the hospital from exploiting a recent controversial
ruling by the National Labor Relations Board, which found that
charge nurses (nurses who oversee the flow of patients on a floor),
or nurses who perform charge duties may be classified as supervisors,
and thereby ineligible for union membership.
- Protecting Newly Licensed Nurses – The nurses are seeking
appropriate restrictions on the responsibilities of newly licensed
and newly hired nurses. The overburdening of new nurses by management
is a major cause of the high turnover of staff.
- Competitive Wages – The BWH nurses are paid as much as
10 percent below nurses at like-sized hospitals in Boston. The
hospital is offering the nurses a two year contract with a 3 percent
per year cost-of-living pay raise each year, while the nurses
are asking for 5 percent per year to make BWH competitive with
other hospitals.
- Sick Time & Disability Benefits – The hospital is
seeking to restrict nurses’ access to sick time, while refusing
to provide a short-term disability benefit, which was the nurses’
number one priority going into negotiations.
The Brigham nurses are outraged by the hospital’s lack of
effort to negotiate a fair settlement with the nurses in light of
the fact that Brigham & Women’s Hospital is one the busiest
and most profitable hospitals in the state. Brigham & Women’s
profits increased by 75 percent in 2005 to more than $74 million,
and the facility posted another $65 million in profits through the
third quarter of this year.
The nurses will cast their vote by secret ballot at two locations:
at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, 75 Francis St. and at MNA
Headquarters in Canton, 340 Turnpike St. The voting will take place
throughout the day late into the evening, with the ballots to be
tallied at the MNA after 11 p.m. Media will not be allowed into
the polling places, but may talk to nurses entering and leaving
both locations. Barbara Norton, the chair of the nurses’ bargaining
unit will be available for media interviews throughout the day on
Monday, Nov. 13.
As the tally will be completed too late for coverage by the media
on Nov. 13, a press conference by the nurses will be held on Tuesday,
Nov. 14, 2006 at 10 a.m. where the official result will be announced.
If the nurses vote for the measure, the strike authorization vote
does not mean the nurses would be calling for a strike immediately.
The vote authorizes the negotiating committee to call a strike as
such time as they feel it is necessary. The two sides are scheduled
to meet again on Nov. 16.
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