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Thread: Nurses on Strike

  1. #1
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    Nurses on Strike

    The nurses at Medical College of Pennsylvania Hospital are on strike in Philadelphia, PA. The strike started 11/11/03. We are out there 24/7 in cold, rain, and heavy wind. This hospital is owned by the TENET Corp. And Yes, TENET has hired scab nurses in our place. We want to inform nurses everywhere of our cause. We are striking to help increase staffing levels and stop Manditory OT. Some units work 2 nurses to 24 patients. Tenet wants us to work an additional 4 hours after completing a 12 hour shift without notice and for straight time! This is not safe. They want to be able to cancel our shift at their will and force us to take our vacation time. We also have to use 5 vacation days before we can start to use our sick leave. These are the days that most of us would like to plan spending with our families. Tenet is offering an 11% raise over 2 years but the want us to now pay 50% of our health insurance. Please show your support for your Brother/Sister nurses in our just cause. You can email me at RNangelER@aol.com with any comments, questions, concerns and support. I will forward letters to my co-workers.
    Thanks,
    Angel

  2. #2

    Re: Nurses on Strike

    I support all that you are doing to make our places of employment better! Good luck to all of you out there in Philly!
    Michelle

  3. #3
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    Re: Nurses on Strike

    http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/...al/7281135.htm

    For your reading Pleasure. . . MCP nurses are an inspiration to us all!!!!

    I found this in The Philadelphia Daily News. Read below are the link above

    Posted on Mon, Nov. 17, 2003

    Ronnie Polaneczky | MCP strike over standards a lesson for labor
    By Ronnie Polaneczky
    polaner@phillynews.com

    THERE'S SOMETHING riveting about the nursing strike at the Medical College of Pennsylvania.

    This one ain't just about money or benefits.

    It's about standards.

    Let me ask you: When's the last time a strike in this city was about anything other than socking it to The Man, right in the wallet?

    Whether they're schoolteachers who want better insurance or bus drivers hankering after a cushier retirement, organized labor nearly always walks the picket line in blatant self interest.

    Nothing wrong with that. But it doesn't necessarily stir public support beyond a general feeling of empathy. Who doesn't want a fatter paycheck and juicier benefits?

    But the MCP nurses - still on the picket line over the weekend - are using their moral authority as front-line caregivers to call attention to something we should all be worried about:

    There aren't enough of them to go around.

    Their hospital is so understaffed, they say, they are constantly forced to work overtime.

    "I've seen nurses crying, exhausted, because they've just been told they can't go home because the next shift isn't covered," one MCP nurse told me.

    And that scares them, since studies show that tired nurses are more likely to make errors than well-rested ones.

    Money does figure in here somewhere, of course. MCP's just-expired nursing contract offered double-time pay to all nurses - whether full- or part-time - working these unscheduled shifts. Now, the hospital wants to pay time-and-a-half to full-time nurses forced to work additional hours, and straight time pay to part-time workers asked to do the same.

    But nurses I spoke with said the extra money was their only insurance that staffing wouldn't go even lower than its current meager level, since MCP's bottom line might otherwise implode from all that double-time moola.

    If the new pay scale is put into place, "they'll go even crazier" with mandatory overtime, says one MCP nurse.

    So screw it all, she says - the forced overtime, and even the old double-time to fund it.

    "We won't put patients or our own licenses at risk anymore."

    To be fair to MCP, it's no secret that hospitals everywhere are chronically understaffed. For evidence, look no further than the brand-new health-care-recruiting TV commercial starring Ed Rendell - as a hairy-chested, scrub-wearing nurse.

    And MCP administrators say their nurse vacancies are no worse than any other hospital's: They say they have 60 (though nurses say it's closer to 75), which they accommodate by closing floors, thereby reducing their total patient census.

    But that measure, says the nurses' union leader, has been both ineffective and beside the point.

    "If MCP says its staffing levels are no worse than anywhere else, then we've all gotten too used to a terrible situation," said Michael Bodisnky, executive director of Local 112 of the Office & Professional Employees International Union.

    "Patient safety is at risk."

    See, this is where MCP's nurses could win the PR battle of this war: They're actually advocating for something not solely for themselves, but also for us.

    And it makes you wonder: What if organized workers did this more often - struck for improvements in areas that really matter to the people they serve?

    What if schoolteachers struck for more federal money for their classrooms, not just for richer pension benefits?

    What if social workers struck for bigger staffs, so that no foster child would slip through the cracks?

    What if clergymen boycotted their own Sunday services until church leaders dealt with moral crises infecting their own ranks?

    Why then, something might actually change.

    And those workers might have more of our support when they strike for the things that matter only to them.

    Like bigger paychecks and kick-ass benefits.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Send e-mail to polaner@phillynews.com

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