June 26, 2002
By PATTI MENGERS
pmengers@delcotimes.com
http://www.delcotimes.com/site/news....id=18171&rfi=6
UPLAND -- More than 100 registered nurses are expected to rally at noon today in front of Crozer-Chester Medical Center to demonstrate dissatisfaction with lack of progress in negotiations for their contract which expires June 30.
"We had hoped to be a little further along. The nurse-to-patient ratio is where we're putting a lot of work and effort," said Bobbi McClay, president of the Crozer-Chester Nurses Association.
The union, which is a division of the Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals, represents about 700 registered nurses at Crozer. On June 7 they voted 474-12 to authorize a strike should they fail to win a new contract by the time the current one expires.
Yesterday was their latest in a series of bargaining sessions that began in mid-April with Crozer executives.
Their next bargaining session is set for tomorrow.
Kathy Scullin, vice president of marketing and public relations for Crozer-Keystone Health System, which owns Crozer-Chester Medical Center, described negotiations as "productive."
"Our nursing staff is a critical part of our organization and we are hopeful that we can reach a settlement that is good for our nurses and our organization as a whole," said Scullin.
She declined to elaborate on the terms being discussed.
The union's lead negotiator, Bill Cruice, director of the Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals, said safe staffing and recruiting and retaining nurses are the key issues.
"So far the administration of the hospital has said it does not want to agree to ratios. They said if it becomes law they would do it. I think it is short-sighted and I think it is a mistake not to want to agree to it," said Cruice.
Last week state Sen. Allyson Y. Schwartz, D-Philadelphia, and state Rep. Timothy Solobay, D-Canonsburg, introduced a bill to set nurse-to-patient ratios in Pennsylvania hospitals and provide grants to enhance recruitment and training of new registered nurses which are in short supply across the country.
The California Nurses Association, whose leaders helped organize the Pennsylvania union in 2000, successfully lobbied for landmark legislation setting nurse-to-patient ratios in California in 1999.
Cruice said setting nurse-to-patient ratios at Crozer would help draw registered nurses back to the hospital which, like most hospitals, is suffering at least a 10 percent shortage in nurses.
"There should be another 100 (registered nurses at Crozer)," maintained Cruice, who noted that nurses don't want to work under conditions that compromise quality of care.
McClay said the nursing shortage is most evident in the medical-surgical units where, at night, nurses each can be responsible for eight to nine patients per shift.
Union negotiators are proposing no more that five patients per nurse in medical-surgical units and no more than two patients per nurse in critical care.
Cruice said in addition to limiting the number of patients they can be assigned per shift, Crozer nurses are bargaining for improved working conditions such as the elimination of mandatory overtime.
"Although it's not their preference, come July 2, the nurses have voted overwhelmingly to strike. Although that's not something they want to do, it underscores how they feel about these issues," said Cruice.
ŠThe Daily Times 2002