| 6.03.03
UMass
Medical School RNs Will Hold an Informational Picket on June 4
As Contract Talks Stall Over Failure to Provide UMMS RNs the Same Pay
and Benefits as Nurses at UMass Memorial Health Care As Promised in
Merger Legislation
While
UMMS Nurses Work Side-by-Side with UMMC Nurses Every Day, Medical School
Management Wants to Pay them 16 percent Less
WORCESTER,
Mass. – Registered nurses who are employed by UMass Medical
School (UMMS) as a result of the merger of the UMass Memorial Health
Care system back in 1998 issued a notice to UMass Medical School management
of their intention to hold an informational picket on June 4 from 4
- 6 p.m. The nurses, who have been negotiating a new contract for over
one year, decided to issue the picket notice as management continues
to refuse to offer them a contract with the same terms and conditions
as that recently negotiated with the 700 registered nurses employed
in the private sector system at UMass Memorial-University Campus.
Pursuant
to state legislation, Memorial Hospital and the University of Massachusetts
Medical Center merged in 1998. All eligible RNs were offered positions
with the private sector entity UMass Memorial, and approximately 90
RNs remained Medical School employees so that they could achieve sufficient
service for retirement benefits or because the program they worked for
is run by the Medical School.
The current
contract dispute involves more than 90 registered nurses who remained
Medical School employees. Seventy nurses are leased to UMass Memorial
and work side-by-side at the University Campus at 55 Lake Avenue North.
Another 20 nurses have been assigned to work in an adolescent psychiatric
unit that is operated by UMMS. The nurses at the adolescent psychiatric
units work in a unique setting that is one of the most stressful and
dangerous units in the state.
Susan Campbell,
RN, BSN, who cares for troubled adolescents says, "These children come
from horrendous backgrounds of abuse and neglect causing them to resort
to violence and self-abuse, but through proper care of dedicated and
experienced staff these children have hope for a better future and more
productive lives. If we do not have a competitive wage scale, recruitment
and retention of experienced staff will be difficult and may jeopardize
these important treatment programs."
When the
merger of the UMass and Memorial was completed by the legislature in
1998, the intent was to assure RNs comparable wages and benefits. In
the first contract negotiated following the merger, all employees, both
in the state system and in the private sector, were allowed to negotiate
at the same table and were awarded identical contracts in keeping with
the spirit of the merger legislation.
But in
this round of negotiations, UMass Medical School management insisted
that separate negotiations be held. The nurses in the private sector
bargaining unit recently negotiated and ratified an agreement granting
the nurses a 6 percent general wage increase over two years and the
addition of two new wage steps (each worth 6.8 percent) for nurses with
long service at the institution. Under the latest UMMS offer, the 90
public sector nurses will be paid more than 16 percent less than their
colleagues in the private sector.
"These
nurses work every day caring for the same patients and they deserve
the same salary and benefits in their contract that was awarded to our
private sector colleagues," said Robin DiDonato, chair of the nurses'
bargaining unit at the Medical School. "When this merger took place,
a promise was made to all of us that none of us would be disadvantaged
by the merger. That promise has been broken and we want the public to
know that we don't think this is fair. We will be asking for their support
in convincing UMMS management to keep their word."
In addition
to conducting informational picketing, the nurses have been meeting
with area legislators and other public officials to make their case
and ask for their support in convincing UMMS management to change its
position at the table.
The nurses handed
in their picket notice at the end of a negotiating session held yesterday.
They plan to picket on June 4 from 4 – 6 p.m. outside the main entrance
to the Medical School.
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