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12.13.2006
Brigham & Women’s Hospital RNs Ratify
New Two-Year Contract
Pact Includes Landmark Language to Protect Nurses’ Union
Rights and Newly Licensed Nurses; Includes Wage Hike to Make BWH
Nurses the Highest Paid in State
BOSTON, MA—The registered nurses of the
Brigham & Women’s Hospital (BWH) voted yesterday to ratify
a new contract. The two-year pact includes a number of provisions
nurses sought to increase the recruitment and retention of staff
to ensure safe patient care, including landmark contract language
to protect newly licensed nurses and the union rights of nurses.
It also includes pay increases that will make the BWH nurses among
the highest paid nurses in the state.
“We are proud of this agreement as it is the result of our
membership’s willingness to take a stand for their patients
and their profession,” said Barbara Norton, RN, chair of the
nurses’ local bargaining unit. “The nurses spoke and
the hospital was forced to finally listen to us. As a result, nurses
are assured that they will continue to have the legal right to advocate
for their patients; our new nurses will not be forced to practice
beyond their level of experience; and this hospital will have a
pay scale to compete for the best nursing talent to provide the
excellent care the Brigham has long been known for. We hope management
continues to listen to its nurses and uses this agreement as a foundation
for much needed improvements in staffing, which was always the ultimate
goal of these negotiations.”
The two-year agreement runs from Oct. 2006 to Oct. 2008. The pact
includes the following key provisions:
- Protection of Union Rights—The nurses
won contract language that protects union rights for nurses at
the facility and their ability to advocate for patients. The language,
the first of its kind in New England, prevents 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 are thereby ineligible
for union membership. The new language clearly recognizes the
union rights of all nurses in the union.
- Protecting Newly Licensed Nurses—The
nurse won landmark restrictions on the responsibilities of newly
licensed and newly hired nurses, requiring that nurses have at
least 18 months experience before being asked to take on additional
responsibilities such as being placed in charge of a patient unit
or to be asked to precept another nurse.
- Industry-Leading Wages—The
new contract includes across the board pay increases of 3 percent
per year for each year of the contract, with a new 5 percent step
at the top of the salary scale in the first year of the contract
while also increasing the starting pay for nurses by 5 percent.
As a result, at the end of the agreement nurses’ pay will
range from $29.31 per hour at the bottom of the pay scale up to
$60.98 an hour at the top, which will make the nurses the highest
paid nurses in the state.
- Protection of Sick Time Benefits—The
hospital removed a number of proposals to restrict nurses’
sick time benefits.
The 2,700 nurses of BWH, who are represented by the Massachusetts
Nurses Association, began negotiations on July 13, 2006 with a total
of 11 negotiating sessions held before a tentative agreement was
reached during a 14-hour negotiating session on Nov. 20. The settlement
followed an historic 95 percent vote by nurses to authorize a strike,
the largest nurses’ strike vote in the state’s history.
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