| MNA and SEIU Local 767 Sign Pact of
Aid and Support
Prepare for Organizing Push in Southeastern Mass.
In a show of union solidarity and cooperation,
the Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) and the Hospital
Workers Union, Local 767 SEIU, AFL-CIO have entered into an
"agreement of mutual aid and support in the collective bargaining
process, organizing, the legislative/political arena, and
other health care policy forums."
Local 767 of SEIU represents 3,600 health
care workers in seven hospitals, 10 nursing homes and a number
of home health agencies throughout Southeastern Massachusetts
the Cape and Islands, including workers at Good Samaritan
Medical Center, Cape Cod Hospital, Falmouth Hospital, Jordan
Hospital and Tobey Hospital. The local's members include nurses'
aides, technicians, clerical workers, health care professionals
and other support personnel.
The Massachusetts Nurses Association represents
more than 19,000 registered nurses and health care professionals
working in 85 health care facilities statewide, including
a number of hospitals, VNAs and public health departments
on the South Shore, including Good Samaritan Medical Center,
Jordan Hospital, Tobey Hospital, Cape Cod and Falmouth Hospital.
"This agreement signals a real commitment
by those of us who organize health workers to combine our
efforts and share resources to step up organizing and enhance
the power of unionized health care workers in this regions
of the state," said Karen Higgins, a nurse at Boston Medical
Center and chair of the MNA Cabinet for Labor Relations, who
helped forge this alliance.
According to Mike Fadel, Director of Local
767, "The agreement makes sense in world dominated by managed
care and dramatic restructuring, where all health care workers
need a coordinated, and unified voice to combat the actions
of health care administrators bent on putting profits ahead
of patients."
In addition to pledging cooperation on issues
and projects, the agreement provides a process for handling
turf issues as the two unions pursue organizing drives in
facilities of mutual interest.
"We have received great interest from nurses
in the Fall River and New Bedford area about organizing with
the MNA, as has Local 767. This agreement clears the way for
the MNA to concentrate on organizing registered nurses, while
SEIU can concentrate on all other health care worker groups.
This allows us to focus on organizing and provides a united
front against employers who might normally attempt to pit
one union against the other," Higgins explained.
"When all workers are organized, everybody
benefits, and when all workers are organized cooperatively,
management is less able to divide the workforce to stall organizing
efforts," Fadel said.
The cooperative relationship between the two
unions has already been demonstrated at Jordan Hospital, where
registered nurses from the MNA and health care workers from
Local 767, participated in a highly success rally and candlelight
vigil to protest layoffs at the facility and to call for improvements
in patient care.
At the demonstration, the President of the
health care workers bargaining unit at Jordan Hospital read
the text of the agreement to an assembled audience of community
members, employees and the media.
"We are delighted to have the support and
to have developed such a close working relationship with our
unionized colleagues here at Jordan Hospital," said Joanne
Ford, chair of the MNA bargaining unit. "Standing together,
we send a clear and strong message to management of our resolve
on issues of patient care and workplace rights."
The agreement with SEIU Local 767 mirrors
an agreement the MNA had signed with SEIU Local 285 back in
1986. That agreement covers health care workers represented
by the two unions throughout most of the other regions of
the Commonwealth. |