| 5.12.2003
Mass.
Nurses Association Condemns Tenet-SEIU Neutrality Pact
Supports Calif. Nurses Assn. Challenge of Deal as an Illegal Attempt
to Deny Employees Choice that Could Harm Patients
CANTON,
Mass.—The Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) joined the California
Nurses Association (CNA) in condemning a deal announced on Monday by
Tenet Healthcare and the Service Employee International Union (SEIU)
as an attempt to bribe Tenet employees, deny them a democratic choice
on who should represent them and, in the end, create a "company union"
that will deny nurses at California-based Tenet hospitals from having
a real and powerful union voice on patient care issues.
The Tenet-SEIU
agreement would allow SEIU to conduct organizing campaigns and hold
union elections at 28 Tenet hospitals in California and two in Florida
– with the blessing of Tenet's hospital management. In return, and in
advance of any employees voting for the union, SEIU union locals at
the Tenet hospitals are required to accept pre-negotiated wages in a
four-year contract agreement and give up their federally legislated
right to strike.
The deal
follows months of bad press and scrutiny of Tenet Healthcare, including
government probes into allegations of widespread Medicare fraud by the
company, and is seen by many as a way to squelch true organizing efforts
at Tenet facilities, as well as to buy the silence of long-time critics
of the corporation. The MNA also believes Tenet has cut the deal to
work with SEIU as opposed to the powerful California Nurses Association,
which has negotiated much stronger agreements for nurses in the state.
"This kind
of back-room dealing by a union with the country's most notorious anti-union
and anti-patient corporation is nothing less than shameful and represents
a major setback for the labor movement in California," said Julie Pinkham,
RN, executive director of the Massachusetts Nurses Association, an independent
nurses union representing more than 22,000 RNs and health professionals
in Massachusetts. "The point of collective bargaining is to organize
a union to negotiate a contract that meets your needs. This deal forces
nurses to except a contract in order to have a union, and a union without
the power to act like a union at all."
World renowned
consumer advocate Ralph Nader has also joined CNA and the MNA in questioning
the agreement and its impact on patients.
"Tenet
is notorious for its commitment to profits regardless of the consequences
for the public's well being," said Nader. "As has already occurred with
other arrangements, SEIU's back room deal degrades independent professional
responsibility of nurses for patient care protection."
The Massachusetts
Nurses Association represents two Tenet-owned hospitals in Massachusetts
and is currently negotiating a new contract at Tenet-owned St. Vincent/Worcester
Medical Center in Worcester, Mass. In 2000, the nurses at the facility
led a highly publicized 49-day strike over the issues of unsafe staffing
and mandatory overtime, ultimately winning landmark contract language
to prohibit the practice at the facility.
"We believe
employees should be free to form unions with a representative of their
choosing, in an environment free from company coercion," Pinkham said.
On Thursday,
registered nurses at seven Tenet hospitals in Los Angeles and Orange
County petitioned the federal labor board for a representation election.
That process, which provides RNs at those hospitals with a genuine democratic
choice and allows other unions to participate, supersedes the Tenet-SEIU
pact and will proceed.
"Free elections
should be a model for Tenet RNs and all Tenet employees. In the United
States, employees still get to choose their union and should not have
the company choose it for them," said CNA executive director Rose Ann
DeMoro.
"It's outrageous
that non-union Tenet RNs and other employees, who are far behind the
economic standards of other hospital workers, especially RNs represented
by CNA in 150 facilities across California, would be compelled to join
a union anointed by Tenet to qualify for pay increases," DeMoro said.
"Tenet
should immediately provide the pay increases and any other improvements
promised in this back room deal to its deserving employees – without
conditions, and without denying their democratic rights to freely select
a union of their choice," DeMoro added.
Instead,
Tenet employees would be locked into a long term agreement with the
main terms decided in advance in closed door meetings with top managements
of Tenet and SEIU.
Further,
there are no indications that Tenet RNs, in particular, will be permitted
to continue to exercise their patient advocacy obligations and be able
to freely protect their patients. In the Kaiser Permanente deal with
SEIU and AFSCME which SEIU cites as a model in its press release, those
unions agreed to silence on hospital closures or any business decisions
that compromise patient care and SEIU co-wrote harmful programs such
as bonuses for telephone advice clerks who limit patient referrals to
physicians.
CNA said
yesterday that it will file charges with the National Labor Relations
Board and is considering other legal actions against the pact. Several
provisions of the deal are illegal including:
- Forcing
employees to join SEIU as a condition for receiving pay and benefit
increases.
- Bribing
employees with the promise of increased pay solely based on joining
SEIU.
- Selecting
for employees what union they have to join and granting exclusive
favors to that union.
For Tenet,
said DeMoro, "This appears to be a short term public relations strategy
designed to drive up their stock prices with the supposed promise of
'labor peace'. Perhaps they are guided by illusions of hefty profit
taking for top executives who have seen their stock portfolios plummet
in recent months due to numerous federal and state investigations into
Tenet's billing practices and patient care conditions."
"But it
will be a failed strategy," DeMoro continued. "If Tenet is doing this
for investor security, investors should feel anything but secure."
More information
about CNA, Tenet, and SEIU is available on the CNA website at www.calnurse.org.
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