| |
MASSACHUSETTS NURSE NEWSLETTER ::
October 2006
President's Column
We are a powerful union, but we can do even more
By Beth Piknick
MNA President
Let me start by saying that the past year, my first
year as president, has been a whirlwind adventure. I come away from
these 365 days more convinced than ever that the MNA is a powerful
organization. We are a powerful union. The people in this room,
individually and collectively, are powerful people.
I am awed by the work that this organization has done to move the
issue of safe staffing forward, and I will never forget that night
standing in the House chamber as the roll call was taken and our
safe staffing bill passed by a 133–20 margin. Next year I
hope to have that same feeling again, but this time in both houses
and at the desk of our next governor: Deval Patrick.
I was proud that the MNA led the fight against the BU bioterrorism
lab and has taken a stand against the farce that is the magnet program.
It was encouraging to see our efforts around occupational health
and safety continue to bear fruit. This past year we were able to
get our workplace violence bill and our safe patient handling bill
out of committee for the first time, and our alliance with OSHA
has provided helpful education to nurses throughout the state.
I was inspired by the tenacity and the strength of our members of
Unit 7, who waged a relentless battle against the governor to finally
win a new contract.
I was proud to watch my own bargaining unit at Cape Cod Hospital
rally themselves and the public to wage a campaign to win contract
language specifying RN-to-patient ratios in every unit.
And I am moved and inspired by the courage and unity of our brothers
and sisters at UMass Medical Center, who just last week took an
historic strike vote—the largest in MNA history—to take
a stand in order to protect their pension and the integrity of their
contract. I would ask all members of the UMass bargaining unit who
are here today to stand so your colleagues can applaud you for the
courage you have shown. Please know that we are all with you and
that your fight is our fight.
So I am proud of the work we do and the power we have, but I wanted
to take this time to highlight a concern I have and how that concern
presents a challenge to all of us as we move forward.
My concern can be expressed by a comment made to me one time by
a member, a leader of a local bargaining unit, who said, “I
wish the overall MNA membership could feel and appreciate our power
in the same way that those in the outside world perceive our power.”
What this person was expressing was her concern over the disconnect
that exists within our organization. The local bargaining leadership
and many members don’t always see the connection they have
within their own facility to the MNA as a whole. They don't see
the connection they have within their own facility to the public,
the patients, patients' families, other organizations and our legislators.
In the past year, I have taken time to travel the state talking
to local bargaining units. I have walked picket lines, attended
regional events, and talked to those in the field about the MNA.
As an organization, we have begun to do the same. This past year,
our division of communications conducted focus groups and a statewide
telephone survey of our members. I would like to share some of the
highlights of that survey.
The good news is that the vast majority of our members feel satisfied
with their membership. They also have strong faith in their local
unions and they hold their union contract as their most important
asset that is derived from their status as an MNA member.
They also see the MNA as doing what our mission says we should be
doing. They see us as a powerful advocate for the profession and
for patient care. They also strongly support all the areas of activity
that the organization is involved in.
But the survey also found that even though they are satisfied with
their membership, they don’t feel connected to the MNA, particularly
beyond their bargaining unit. They also don’t fully understand
all that the MNA is and does, and how the MNA is actually addressing
their concerns.
Members expressed a lack of connection to the regions and the state
organization. They didn’t understand how the organization
all fit together. They also questioned the importance of our elections
and a lack of understanding of the importance of electing or running
for a statewide office.
So this is our challenge in the coming year. We need to connect
the dots of our organization. We need to make our members fully
understand all of what the MNA is and does.
Our five-year plan approved at last year’s convention provides
the blueprint for action to do all this.
With our new resources we now have the ability to reach out and
support our members through increased staff and educational resources
both in the division of labor action and the division of nursing.
Our mobile unit will allow us to be out in the field talking with
and educating members.
Our print shop and expanded communications services will allow us
to provide better materials and timely communication to keep members
informed of our story. We will also be able to do more advertising
to the general public about nurses and the important issues we face,
which is something our members desperately want.
We have a new orientation video and are working on a new-member
orientation program for the bargaining units to educate our members
from the beginning of all MNA has to offer.
As demonstrated by our legislative efforts over the past two years,
we have the resources and strategies to involve more and more members
in the legislative process. This is one area, even for me, where
the dots have truly been connected. More of our nurses than ever
before are seeing the connection between political action and their
workplace and they are participating like never before.
We started to expand our division of legislation to include regional
grassroots organizers to carry this work deeper into the organization.
A big challenge for this organization and for any organization is
to make it come alive. And life to an organization like ours is
evidenced through the lifeblood of a lively and competitive election
process. On all levels of the organization we need to communicate
to our members the importance of running for office, on the local,
regional and state levels. We need to communicate to members the
importance of leadership positions and to make them want to vote
for those positions.
Finally, we have a whole new generation of nurses coming up through
the ranks. It is my hope that these nurses who come after us will
already have the dots connected for them and that they will be able
to see where they belong within the MNA.
In the coming year we will be talking with and will survey many
of our newest nurses in order to learn more about their needs and
how best to connect with them so that we can sustain this organization
into the next generation of professional activism.
As I said earlier, we are a strong and powerful organization. We
have accomplished so much and can do so much more if we stay united
and if we keep working together to connect the dots. This will allow
us to create a picture of nurses and nursing that shows us what
we truly are—the voice of health care in Massachusetts.
|
|