Professionals or "workers"

Nurses Union

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I am attending nursing school in Michigan, a very "union" state. I have recently moved here from Texas, a right to work state. There is a big political issue going on here about Right-to-work. And until people started posting on our student fb page, I don't think it dawned on me that nurses had a union. I have a lot to learn fast, I guess.

The biggest issue I have is that I don't really want to be a "worker" that needs protection by a union, but would rather be considered a "professional". Other than teachers, are there any other degreed professions that have a union? I may just be ignorant because of my life in Texas, but I haven't been able to find any or references. Most just have professional societies ... which we also have...but these are not unions. It almost seems demeaning that teachers and nurses, both primarily female professions, feel the need to be "protected" like lower skilled workers.

I have a degree in Bioengineering and never heard of a union for engineers. Lawyers and doctors don't have unions. I couldn't find one for respiratory therapists, physical therapists, or registered dieticians. I know in both my husband's line of work (teamster) and my father-in-laws work (electrician), you no longer could belong to the union when you moved to a professional role (management of any sort).

Isn't it kind of demeaning to our professional status to unionize?

(Please be kind, I am asking really asking to learn and not to challenge.)

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

A new nurse's union was born out of that ratio fight in California, here is a link in case anyone's interested. National Nurses United

Physician assistants require a pre-medical undergraduate education and a master's degree to enter practice at this point.

(Not trying to be argumentative, but, just FYI, there are (still) associate's degree PA programs around.)

I initially came to this web site for support from my peers. But Im beginning to see all too often rude comments to questions and replies. If you can't be respectful in your comments, either dig that stick out off your butt or don't comment at all. Ive about had it with Allnurses because instead of getting help from the site, I usually walk away angry or hurt instead.

Why would you let a bunch of strangers make you angry and hurt? Not everyone has the same view points and will not agree with what is being posted. Not only will you find that on this site but you will find it in real life too. You have never had a conversation with someone who has a different view point?

Specializes in ICU.

(Not trying to be argumentative, but, just FYI, there are (still) associate's degree PA programs around.)

This is news to me. Everywhere I've worked PAs are midlevel providers just like NPs.

Why would you let a bunch of strangers make you angry and hurt? Not everyone has the same view points and will not agree with what is being posted. Not only will you find that on this site but you will find it in real life too. You have never had a conversation with someone who has a different view point?
Quite the contrary. I love a healthy debate. Ironically, I was referring to the people who actually ARE incapable of having a different opinion and respond rudely. It only has to go like this "this is my opinion" "I disagree, this is my opinion" I understand my post could have been more clear by quoting the post I was commenting on, but why did you jump to the conclusion that I was referring to instances where people did not agree with me. I DO get angry on here. I come to the site for advice, to read healthy debates, to learn, but my mood recently has taken a hit when my so called "professional " peers harp on some poor soul (not even referring to myself) who dared asked a question, responding with unprofessional, immature rudeness. Im just seeing it more and more lately, so its been getting to me. I used to rave about this site to those who had not been here. Now I find myself feeling bad for new grads who post questions and get snotty answers.
Why would you let a bunch of strangers make you angry and hurt? Not everyone has the same view points and will not agree with what is being posted. Not only will you find that on this site but you will find it in real life too. You have never had a conversation with someone who has a different view point?
MN Nurse's response to the original poster was uncalled for. There, that is my specific example. The poor OP was just confused and wanted opinions and advice, not to be told that she needed manners. There wss nothing inappropriate about her post that warranted that response. I myself do flat out call people on their rudeness here, but only when its appropriate
Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
I am attending nursing school in Michigan, a very "union" state. I have recently moved here from Texas, a right to work state. There is a big political issue going on here about Right-to-work. And until people started posting on our student fb page, I don't think it dawned on me that nurses had a union. I have a lot to learn fast, I guess.

The biggest issue I have is that I don't really want to be a "worker" that needs protection by a union, but would rather be considered a "professional". Other than teachers, are there any other degreed professions that have a union? I may just be ignorant because of my life in Texas, but I haven't been able to find any or references. Most just have professional societies ... which we also have...but these are not unions. It almost seems demeaning that teachers and nurses, both primarily female professions, feel the need to be "protected" like lower skilled workers.

I have a degree in Bioengineering and never heard of a union for engineers. Lawyers and doctors don't have unions. I couldn't find one for respiratory therapists, physical therapists, or registered dieticians. I know in both my husband's line of work (teamster) and my father-in-laws work (electrician), you no longer could belong to the union when you moved to a professional role (management of any sort).

Isn't it kind of demeaning to our professional status to unionize?

(Please be kind, I am asking really asking to learn and not to challenge.)

Congratulations on Michigan's new "Right to Work" laws. You sound like the sort of person who would be thrilled about such a thing. You should be frightened; you should be very frightened. But you'd rather be considered a "professional" than enjoy the benefits unions have bought us over the years.

Nurses need to be protected because management, more and more, is trying to take away our professional status in the name of making us "more professional." Rather than letting us continue to enjoy the autonomy we've enjoyed for decades, management is forcing us into color coded scrubs, putting us "on salary" so they don't have to pay us for the nights, weekends and holidays that we work and so that they don't have to pay us overtime. (A union would have nipped that in the bud.)

Rather than the staffing ratios unions have fought for, we now have to take care of as many patients as management can cram into our space while working short handed. Gone are our floating protections -- we're considered interchangeable cogs. A Cardiac nurse can float to L & D and a nursery nurse can float to rehab. A nurse is a nurse is a nurse you know. Unions fought against mandatory overtime, but nurses don't need no stinkin' unions, so I guess we'll be doing the mandatory overtime again. Oh, and some of that overtime is covering strike shifts for the unlicensed personnel who WILL be striking because they weren't stupid enough to think they didn't need unions.

Unions gave us the right to actually USE our vacation time, but now management is free not to grant it because "we're short staffed." We're always short staffed. Without union protection, without staffing ratios, we can just run short staffed.

The language you've used in your post is mighty inflammatory for someone who isn't challenging but just wants to learn.

Unions have given us a number of protections and benefits over the years. As much as you might want to believe that your nursing degree automatically confers professional status upon you, that really isn't so. And it's becoming less and less true as time goes by because more and more people like you believe that unions are demeaning.

I guess I'd just rather be demeaned and get paid for the weekends, nights, holidays and overtime I work. I'd rather be demeaned that be floated everywhere in the hospital because nurses are just interchangable cogs. i'd rather be demeaned and be able to use my vacation time, protect my job from the manager who wants to save money by firing the most senior folks and hire newbies instead, and be able to care for my patients safely because the union has forced the issue of staffing ratios. And I'd much rather be demeaned by union representation than wear the silly, cheap, shoddy scrubs my employer is forcing us to wear because they now own 52% of the company that makes said silly, cheap, shoddy scrubs.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
I call BS.

Calling hundreds of thousands of past, future, and present RNs status "demeaning" is a bad way to start a conversation you hope to learn something from.

Hope you pick up some manners in Michigan.

I don't agree. Leave your feelings out of this and try to discuss this intellectual matter seriously, please. It is very true that unions in most cases are utilized by laborers, not autonomous professionals -- which is what nursing is supposed to aspire to. By denying this, you help to hold back the profession.

The person who should have left his or her feelings out in order to have a serious discussion was the original poster who used some mighty inflammatory language, then claimed she wasn't challenging, she just wanted information. I agree with MN-Nurse; RNdynamic is out of line.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
Quite the contrary. I love a healthy debate. Ironically, I was referring to the people who actually ARE incapable of having a different opinion and respond rudely. It only has to go like this "this is my opinion" "I disagree, this is my opinion" I understand my post could have been more clear by quoting the post I was commenting on, but why did you jump to the conclusion that I was referring to instances where people did not agree with me. I DO get angry on here. I come to the site for advice, to read healthy debates, to learn, but my mood recently has taken a hit when my so called "professional " peers harp on some poor soul (not even referring to myself) who dared asked a question, responding with unprofessional, immature rudeness. Im just seeing it more and more lately, so its been getting to me. I used to rave about this site to those who had not been here. Now I find myself feeling bad for new grads who post questions and get snotty answers.

People jumped to the conclusion that you were referring to instances where people disagreed with you because you didn't quote the posts you referred to.

And if you're referring to the OP as "some poor soul" who "dared to ask a question", what you're seeing is the response to the inflammatory language that "poor soul" used. The language used was a blatent putdown of unions -- if the OP was just seeking answers to a question or a healthy debate, more neutral language should have been used.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
MN Nurse's response to the original poster was uncalled for. There, that is my specific example. The poor OP was just confused and wanted opinions and advice, not to be told that she needed manners. There wss nothing inappropriate about her post that warranted that response. I myself do flat out call people on their rudeness here, but only when its appropriate

The OP used some pretty inflammatory language against unions. That is not indicative of someone who is confused or is welcoming of dissenting opinions or advice. That is indicative of someone who lacks manners.

This is news to me. Everywhere I've worked PAs are midlevel providers just like NPs.

They are -- but some are still getting educated at the associate's degree level. NP programs started out as certificate programs; that was the case for a long time before the decision was made to mandate graduate level programs, and graduates of those programs did a perfectly good job of providing care. CA still had some certificate NP programs, and might still have a few (I don't know about that for sure), long after the rest of the US had gone to MSN-level preparation (however, graduates of those programs can only practice in CA -- their education is not recognized by other states that require an MSN minimum).

Specializes in RN.

I am saddened that my home State of Michigan railroaded this legislature through. Unless this is reversed in a few years somehow, it will surely dissolved Unions. When that happens I will leave this State. Read your history books. Without a seat at the 'table' CEO's, management, stock holders, whomever, will strip Nurses of everything possible. Sad week for the future of Michigan RN's...

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