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3.6.03
Lawrence
General Nurses Plan to Picket on March 12th as Contract Talks Stall,
Federal Mediator Calls for Negotiating Session in Boston for March
11th
Nurses
are Seeking Contract Language to Prohibit Mandatory On Call Policies,
Language to Ensure Inexperienced Nurses Receive Appropriate Training
and Orientation, and a Wage Increase to Ensure Recruitment and Retention
of Staff
LAWRENCE,
Mass.—The 350 registered nurses at Lawrence General
Hospital (LGH) are moving ahead with plans to hold an informational
picket outside the entrance to the facility on Wednesday, March
12, 2003 from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., unless a Federal Mediator can help
the parties reach an agreement at a negotiation session the Mediator
has called for Tuesday, March 11th.
The
picketing would be the first job action by the nurses at LGH in
decades, as nurses and hospital management remain divided over four
key issues, including:
- the
nurses' request for contract language that would prohibit the
use of mandatory "on call" policies as a means of staffing the
hospital;
- language
ensuring that newly hired and inexperienced nurses receive proper
training and precepting before taking on "charge" nurse duties
(charge nurses serve as team-leaders on a nursing unit and coordinate
care among the nursing staff);
- language
preventing nurses who are 62 years of age or have 30 years of
service from having to rotate to the night shift; and
- a
wage increases that will help recruit nurses needed to fill 40
long standing vacancies at the facility.
"We
have decided to hold informational picketing because we want the
public to understand that what is at stake in these negotiations
is the very safety and quality of patient care," said Patricia Rogers-Sullivan,
chair of the Massachusetts Nurses Association's bargaining unit
at LGH. "Inadequate pay and stressful working conditions have made
it impossible for this facility to recruit and retain staff necessary
to provide quality patient care. We are also deeply concerned that
the hospital, instead of recruiting staff needed to deliver appropriate
care, is intending to use mandatory on call, another form of forced
overtime to staff this hospital. This is dangerous to patients and
unfair to nurses."
While
hospital nurses in areas such as the operating room and recovery
room (where there is not 24-hour staffing) are routinely required
be "on call" to cover emergency cases, it is rare for nurses in
other areas of the hospital to be required to be on call. As the
issue of mandatory overtime – forcing a nurse to work extra hours
and extra shifts – has gained notoriety as a dangerous practice
to be avoided by hospitals, many hospitals have begun to use mandatory
on call policies for nurses in all areas of the hospital as means
of getting around mandatory overtime to fill staffing vacancies
at facilities.
"Whether
it's mandatory overtime or mandatory on call, these practices are
both dangerous to patients and abusive to nurses," said Wendy McGill,
the MNA representative for the nurses at the negotiating table.
"Nurses deserve to be able to go home at the end of their shift,
to have a personal life and the opportunity to rest and recover
so they can provide optimum care."
The
nurses are also concerned about how the hospital is treating new
nurses, those who have just graduated from nursing school. Because
it has failed to recruit appropriate staff to operate the facility,
management has been assigning inexperienced nurses with little training
or precepting to assume "charge" nurse duties. Charge nurses, who
should be the most experienced nurse on the unit, serve as a team
leader for the nurses on the unit, helping to oversee and coordinate
care among the nurses on the floor.
"They
are asking new nurses to assume this role, which is unfair to the
nurse and inappropriate for the patients on that floor," Rogers-Sullivan
said. "These nurses become frustrated and are more likely to leave
the facility, which negates efforts to recruit and retain staff.
We are asking for the opportunity to properly train and precept
these nurses so they feel comfortable and satisfied with their care
and will be more likely to stay on with us."
The
nurses are also looking for a competitive salary increase to allow
them to recruit nurses needed to provide safe patient care. They
are seeking a 10% salary increase to maintain their position with
other nurses in the region. The hospital is offering a 3% increase
in the first year, with a re-opener to the contract to address salary
issues in the second year.
The
LGH nurses and management have been negotiating their contract since
August, with 14 sessions held to date, and the last session held
on March 4. The contract officially expired on Oct. 5, 2002 but
the parties had agreed to extend the contract until last week when
the nurses terminated the agreement to allow them to conduct informational
picketing. A Federal Mediator was called in this week to move the
process forward and has called for a session on Tuesday.
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