New York Nurses Take Back Their Union

Published

... Push For Safe Staffing :cheers:

New York nurses upended the 100-year power imbalance between bedside nurses and nurse managers yesterday, voting to bar supervisors from elected office in the New York State Nurses Association.

NYSNA simultaneously launched a public campaign to make New York the second state that legally mandates staffing levels for nurses, pushing a nurse-to-patient ratio bill similar to one adopted in California in 2004. ...

Split Personality

The bylaw changes that nurses approved are the product of many years of struggle inside the union, against a bizarre structure that often left the union hamstrung.

Because of a holdover from the days of professional associations that pre-dated nurse unionism, nurse managers were eligible to serve on the NYSNA board of directors. Indeed, nurse managers frequently controlled the board.

Managerial involvement in unions is, of course, prohibited by labor law. To stay within legal bounds, the board of directors couldn't oversee the central work of the organization--union representation, organizing, and bargaining--despite the fact that the lion's share of NYSNA's resources came from union members and was spent on union activity.

The board could not debate or discuss the union's future or vote on any matters relating to the union. That left union functions, including decision-making over bargaining strategy, resource allocation and what grievances and arbitrations to invest time and money in, controlled by staff.

Elected leaders were marginalized. The union had a delegate assembly composed of bedside nurses, which ostensibly set policy, but as an advisory body without control of the union's resources and agenda, it was ignored.

By voting to give power to leaders elected by bedside nurses, New York is following the lead of nurses in many states, from Massachusetts to California.

The tension between staff nurses and managers bubbled up in most statewide nursing organizations over the past 20 years, driving many to abandon the American Nurses Association. The 115-year-old professional association formulates standards for nursing practice, and opposed nurse unionism for years. ANA includes managers in its ranks and leadership.

Such divisions fueled the creation of National Nurses United (AFL-CIO) in 2009, bringing together unions in California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota with the United Association of Nurses, formerly the union arm of the ANA. ...

See more at: http://labornotes.org/2012/05/new-york-nurses-take-back-their-union-push-safe-staffing#sthash.FNCdMWFx.dpuf

Specializes in CRNA, Finally retired.

What was NYSNA doing before when it represented nurses in hospitals all over the state? Were they not negotiating contracts? New NYSNA leadership has stripped itself of all professional obligations to its membership. Many positions were decimated in Albany and all efforts are devoted towards union activities. They might as well be 1199. Our newsletter is a disgrace. Don't get me wrong - I'm all in favor of staffing ratios, but we have lost something in becoming on organization who's president signs her letters "In solidarity". Nurses are so much more than that.

I've got four words for you all, "Long Island College Hospital". Keep your eyes on how this ongoing saga plays out which both NYSNA and 1199 are very actively involved. If the place remains open in some reasonable idea of a hospital then both unions will be covered in glory. OTOH if things go the way of Saint Vincent's (more luxury real estate housing with a bit of urgent/ambulatory care centers thrown in), then we shall probably hear a different story.

Specializes in CRNA, Finally retired.

LICH is a sad case and I'd hate to see it go (worked there a long time ago) because there are so few true community hospitals left. But NYSNA and 1199 do not an angel make.

holy crap, are they STILL talking about closing that place? When I worked for St. Vincent and word got out they were closing, they closed that place faster than you can say blueberry pancakes. Ironically it was a NYSNA union hospital. LICH closing was in talks when I was applying for nursing schools in 2005.

Living in virginia now, I can appreciate what a union, esp like NYSNA, does for a nursing profession. ( i'm the minority that didn't enjoy working for 1199). I never imagined you can make half the salary but pay 4 times more for your benefits.

LICH is a sad case and I'd hate to see it go (worked there a long time ago) because there are so few true community hospitals left. But NYSNA and 1199 do not an angel make.

According to local NYC news reports today the deal to save LICH is falling apart with even the mayor wanting to move to "plan B". NYSNA and 1199 are already starting to point fingers. Brooklyn Health Partners plan to keep open Long Island College Hospital in trouble - New York Business Journal

holy crap, are they STILL talking about closing that place? When I worked for St. Vincent and word got out they were closing, they closed that place faster than you can say blueberry pancakes. Ironically it was a NYSNA union hospital. LICH closing was in talks when I was applying for nursing schools in 2005.

Living in virginia now, I can appreciate what a union, esp like NYSNA, does for a nursing profession. ( i'm the minority that didn't enjoy working for 1199). I never imagined you can make half the salary but pay 4 times more for your benefits.

Good to year from a former Saint Vinny's nurse! Glad you are doing well and landed on your feet. Actually passed the old place Monday night ( no choice was down in the Village and that is the way taxi chose to go), and it would break your heart to see what has happened to the former campus.

As one has stated repeatedly LICH is " déjà vu all over again" with 1199, NYSNA and others assuming they scored a win when Christine Quinn lost her mayoralty bid and deBlasio won. That and between suing the heck out of SUNY it was thought that the new bidding process would save Long Island College Hospital. But apparently that deal isn't working out with NYS health officials calling BH Partner's winning bid a "fantasy". Long story short just as with Saint Vinny's LICH's campus is worth more than a full service hospital.

One fears things will go just as they did with Saint Vincent's, the place will be sold and a bulk of the campus will become luxury housing (just what Brooklyn Heights needs more of *LOL*) , with perhaps an urgent and or ambulatory care center thrown in for the healthcare component.

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