| 3.10.03
Hundreds
Gather to Celebrate MNA's 100th Anniversary
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On
February 26, 2003, more than 400 nurses from all corners of the Commonwealth
took part in an historic three-part celebration to mark the 100th Anniversary
of the Massachusetts Nurses Association. The MNA, the largest and oldest
association for registered nurses in Massachusetts, used the occasion
to honor its past, celebrate its many accomplishments and to point to
present and future challenges faced by the profession.
The event was kicked
off with a special ceremony and demonstration in the Gardner Auditorium
at the Massachusetts State House. In her introductory remarks, MNA President
Karen Higgins underscored the reasoning behind the decision to begin
the festivities in that location.
"The birth, growth
and continued development of registered nurses and of all professional
nursing is directly tied to and dependent on laws and regulations that
have been sponsored by, lobbied for and championed by the Massachusetts
Nurses Association in concert with our elected leaders in this building,"
Higgins explained. "In this hall, Gardner Auditorium, many important
hearings on the issues confronting nurses over the last 100 years have
been held. It was here that testimony was given time and again to convince
legislators to create a board of registration for nurses. It was here
that the nurses made their case for the creation of an amendment to
improve the Nurse Practice Act which governs nursing practice, and it
was here in 1964 that nurses testified and won support for a law granting
nurses the right to pursue collective bargaining in the Commonwealth."
Underscoring the
partnership between legislators and nurses, State Representative Peter
J. Koutoujian, House Chair of the Joint Committee on Health Care, read
the text of a legislative resolution passed in both houses of the legislature
to recognize the accomplishments and contributions of the MNA to the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
This was followed
by a special "carnation laying" ceremony to call attention to the current
crisis in nursing and patient safety in the state. Upon entering the
hall, nurses were each given a single white carnation. The carnations
symbolized nurses' commitment to providing quality patient care, as
well as those nurses who have left the profession because of untenable
staffing conditions.
Higgins introduced
the ceremony by saying, "Nurses are here to tell you that while we are
proud of our history and the profession we have created to care for
the public, you need to know that we are finding it more difficult to
meet the legal, ethical and educational standards that define quality
nursing care. The promise of quality care made to the public through
the establishment of our profession and the laws that govern it cannot
be kept given the current conditions created by the health care industry."
Higgins then called
for the nurses to exit the hall, and as they did, they took their carnations
and placed them in a basket held by State Representative Christine Canavan,
RN, herself an MNA member and the lead sponsor for legislation filed
by MNA to regulate RN to patient ratios in Massachusetts hospitals.
"In placing these
carnations in the hands of the legislature, we are once again expressing
our need for partnership and support in working together to protect
the public by passing laws that will allow our patients, their constituents,
to obtain the care they so rightfully deserve," Higgins told the legislators
and the media in the audience.
Upon leaving the
State House, nurses boarded buses (and more than 50 marched) to historic
Faneuil Hall, a short distance from the State House. Faneuil Hall was
the site of the founding meeting of MNA on Feb. 26, 2003. Built in 1740,
Faneuil Hall was a gathering place for the patriots of the American
Revolution, and has since been known as the "cradle of liberty."
The centerpiece
of the program at Faneuil Hall was the presentation of a 30-minute documentary
of the history of the MNA and nursing in Massachusetts over the last
century. The video featured archival footage from nursing and MNA history,
interviews with noted nursing historians and members of the MNA from
events and years past. The program was divided into four segments, with
each segment covering a 25-year period in MNA/nursing history. An MNA
member dressed in the uniform of that period introduced each segment.
As the film ended, MNA President Karen Higgins took the stage to offer
remarks about the present and future challenges of the MNA. While she
spoke, behind her the audience viewed video footage of the carnation
laying ceremony they had just held.
"We wanted to show
the audience that we are all part of a tradition and that the history
of nursing is still being made every day by nurses who engage in the
activities of their professional association. We wanted to show that
the work and the mission of the MNA is ongoing," Higgins said.
As Higgins concluded
her remarks, once again calling upon nurses and the legislature to fulfill
the promise of nursing by passing legislation to provide nurses with
a safe staffing ratio, she asked the nurses to rise and "raise some
thunder for the future of nurses."
The entire hall
rose up and began to bang Thunderstix that were provided, as the song
"Respect" by Aretha Franklin was played. The ovation lasted for more
than five minutes, with nurses cheering and dancing in celebration.
"It was one of the
most exciting and proudest moments I have experienced as a nurse to
see so many of my colleagues reveling in their own history and their
own power as professionals," commented one attendee.
The nurses
then left Faneuil Hall and proceeded to a popular nightclub in the Quincy
Market, adjacent to the Hall, where they completed the celebration.
Nurses enjoyed champagne and refreshments, and a video was played featuring
congratulatory remarks from state and local political leaders, including
Senator Edward Kennedy, Congressman James McGovern, the Speaker of the
Massachusetts House of Representative Thomas Finneran and President
of the State Senate Robert Travaglini. The evening's festivities culminated
with the cutting of the MNA's 100th Anniversary birthday cake.
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