Cutting salaries, taking vacation time...are they free to do as they please?

Nurses Activism

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I have a question concerning some recent activities at my workplace. I am a cath lab nurse in Texas. Recently the hospital laid off 50+ people to cut costs, has closed clinics, shut floors, etc. The same hospital just now (like 2 months ago) opened a completely new cardiac center with a cardiac ER, cardiac ICU, CCU, cath labs...the whole nine yards. Anyway, our labs are already run with the absolute minimum staff. Nobody gets a break, a lunch, or time to pee. I have been in this lab about 6 months. With the hospital about 2.5 yrs working CCU. So 6 months ago they offer me this job. Salaried (exempt) at about $33.00/hr. Now, Friday the 19th, my boss and other upper management people come to us. First we get the "if you walk out of here and say anything bad about the hospital you are cutting your throat" spill, then we are all given figures (on scratch paper) of our new wages, We have two choice, go hourly or salaried. It's all or nothing. Remember there are RN's and RT's here. We all have to make the same decision. Some people wanted hourly, some wanted salary. The boss person decided we would have to go with a majority vote. I think this is wrong on so many levels. We are not a union, We aren't even all in the same profession. The rates were figured individually. She said our rates were figured based on our yrs experience, and our attitudes. Apparently our attitudes were used to determine how big our cuts were going to be.

So long story short, upper and middle management recently took a 10% decrease in salary to help cut costs. The figures we were given were anywhere from a 25-30% decrease in pay. Although many of us have never been written up or disciplined our pay was cut based on attitude. This info was presented to us at 4 pm the Friday before Christmas and the decision had to be made immediately since Christmas is a slow week for the cath lab with MD's on vacation, out of town, etc.

Also, before now we were supposed to be salaried. Sometimes we work 60+ hr weeks and management tells us "that is part of being salaried." When we have a 32 hr week our vacation time is used to make our 40 hrs or else we dont get paid our full salary. I just think this is wrong. It seems we are salaried when it benefits the hospital (60+ hr weeks) and not when we have a short week.

I would just like to know if things like this are legal. If so, it seems that they can do whatever they want and get away with it. I appreciate any help.

Is that before or after the UAW itself, refused to help the Big Three auto industries.

And the OP lives in Texas, anti union land at its finest,

Actually, the UAW has been accepting pay and benefit cuts for years and has accepted more in the latest mess. A few southern senators are determined to completely break the UAW as the price of helping out the auto industry. It's striking that congress was able to approve giving 700 billion to the financial services industry without any enforceable requirement to cut salaries that average in the hundreds of thousands a year, or executive compensation that can run to tens of millions, but feel the need to destroy the last decent paying blue collar jobs in America before loaning 15 billion to the auto companies. And if stories like this one become widespread, I suspect we'll see a lot more unionized hospitals in Texas pretty soon. We don't have that sort of thing happening in California.

It's good that you walked. Not worth it. If I'm on salary, I do 40 hours. No more, no less. If they want more, they can pay more.....

Is that before or after the UAW itself, refused to help the Big Three auto industries.

And the OP lives in Texas, anti union land at its finest,

UAW has a long history of trying to save the Big 3 management from itself:

1. Single Payer.

2. Advocating for small fuel efficient cars as early as 1949. (Google Meyerson for a recent column about these very issues.)

3. Making contract concessions 2 years ago that took the responsibility for healthcare away from management and making it a union responsibility

4. Salary concessions were negotiated 2 years ago that set up a 2 tier compensation plan that changed both pension and starting wages to a lower level.

Texas could be opened to organization with a combination of EFCA and repeal of Taft-Hartley.

Specializes in ICU, M/S,Nurse Supervisor, CNS.

Good luck on your job hunt. I'm sure you made the right decision. You all were getting screwed royally by that hospital administration.

Specializes in A myriad of specialties.
Best argument I have read yet for a unionization drive....

I SOOOO agree with you! Also, perhaps the OP should consult the state's labor laws for info on the lgality of what that hospital is doing to its employees.

Specializes in CTICU.

Good for you - hope the other staff also vote with their feet.

Thanks for all the support yall. I really appreciate it. The physicians are really mad at administration over this and one in particular gets whatever he wants so we will see where this all goes. The funny thing is, they do their employees so dirty that they walk out, and there are already agency people filling spots who they are paying obsene amounts of money. Not very smart IMO. Anyway, I dont know that I would stay regardless of what the docs accomplish, but maybe it will help out the other people who can't/aren't leaving. I really do love my job. I just wish administration would back off and let me do my it!

Thanks again for the support.

Today's economic times give employers the incentive to cut corners every way they want and the best place to cut costs is with personnel issues. You have the option to accept things as the employer hands them to you or you can try to find employment elsewhere. I'm certain there are unemployed people available who will be willing to take your place, no matter what the conditions are. It is that way all the time, not just when the economy is bad.

Yeah I'm sure there are "unemployed people" who will take my job. I'm also sure that nobody is going to walk in off the streets and be able to do my job. If you train staff, then jack them around until they leave, you will never have people who are truly experts in the area. When I leave, an agency cath lab nurse will take my place and they will pay him/her twice the amount they paid me. Not very smart IMO. The economy is bad, but I don't see a problem finding a job. I can make as much as they want to pay me filling pill boxes for elderly people in their homes. I am not going to just sit there and let them decide what they are going to do to me next. That's a good way to get run over if you ask me.

Yeah I'm sure there are "unemployed people" who will take my job. I'm also sure that nobody is going to walk in off the streets and be able to do my job. If you train staff, then jack them around until they leave, you will never have people who are truly experts in the area. When I leave, an agency cath lab nurse will take my place and they will pay him/her twice the amount they paid me. Not very smart IMO. The economy is bad, but I don't see a problem finding a job. I can make as much as they want to pay me filling pill boxes for elderly people in their homes. I am not going to just sit there and let them decide what they are going to do to me next. That's a good way to get run over if you ask me.

I realize this option is less available in many parts of the country, but...

A few years ago the hospital where I had worked for many years got a new CEO with a very "bottom line" mentality. One of his more famous statements was that nurses and patients at our community had been spoiled and that we were all used to care that was "too good" and that times were tight and we were going to have to get used to mediocre care as the new norm. The repeated mantra was "times are changing, if you don't like it go somewhere else." Some did, but some of us had a different idea. We unionized instead. That CEO and the other senior managers he brought in are all long gone - likely wrecking other hospitals - and we're still here.

I am sorry for your situation, can you tell me want part of Texas you are in. Other areas of allnurses posters are saying Texas has escaped the recession and are asking how to ask for more money, which seems crazy to me since here in the Northeast things are bad.

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