US Nurses Stand By UK Nurses

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many nurses with national nurses united will be taking part wednesday in solidarity rallies at the consulate general of britain in five cities -- orlando, chicago, boston, san francisco and los angeles - and the embassy of the united kingdom in dc. they are supporting the millions of public sector workers, including tens of thousands of nurses, who are participating in a massive strike in protest of the british government's attack on their pensions.

if you can't make a rally, you can send them a message via this solidarity form

https://donate.nationalnursesunited.org/page/signup/solidarity-message/source?=uk-social

http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2011/11/29-1#.ttuedukpdqq.facebook

us nurses stand by uk nurses

rallies in six us cities to say: stop cuts to retirement security

with up to two million british workers expected to join the biggest strike in the united kingdom in a generation wednesday, nov. 30, the largest union of registered nurses in the u.s. announced today that it will hold support rallies for british nurses and other workers in six u.s. cities wednesday.

u.s. nurses, joined by other union members in washington and several other cities, will hold noon rallies at the british embassy in washington and at british consulates in boston, chicago, los angeles, orlando, and san francisco.

the actions come amidst huge corporate cash reserves on both sides of the atlantic while government officials in both nations push reductions in retirement security and other cuts. in the u.k., some 30 unions representing nurses, teachers, paramedics, civil servants, and other public workers will protest plans by the conservative government to cut public pensions. in the u.s., support rallies will also remind the public of threats to social security as well.

u.s. rally locations, all actions at 12 noon local time:

  • washington, dc - embassy of the united kingdom, 3100 massachusetts ave nw
  • boston - consulate, one broadway, cambridge
  • chicago - consulate, 625 n. michigan ave.
  • los angeles - consulate, 11766 wilshire blvd.
  • orlando - consulate, 200 south orange ave.
  • san francisco - consulate, one sansome st.

in both countries, politicians seek to slash deficits at the expense of working people. unions in both countries warned that deficit reduction as proposed will lead to increased levels of economic inequality, unemployment, and poverty, exacerbating the crisis in both nations.

in a letter to be delivered wednesday to sir nigel sheinwald, great britain's ambassador to the u.s., nnu executive director roseann demoro said u.s. nurses strongly support british workers "who are standing up for their rights and for the integrity of public services in your country."

"we urge the british government to stop its attempt to make public-sector workers pay more and work longer to receive a smaller pension when they retire. the government's plans will impact women the most, who already suffer from lower pensions. this attack on the people who provide patient care at the national health service, teach school children, and provide essential public services is unconscionable," demoro said.

among major participants in the u.k. strike is unison, whose members include many nurses and other healthcare workers. the strikers are saying no to "pay more, work longer, get less," a so-called "triple squeeze" in which pensions are reduced and age eligibility extended.

"the plans are just a cynical move to raise 4 billion [british pounds] to pay down the deficit caused by the bankers," said karen jennings, unison's assistant general secretary.

one solution put forward both in the u.s. and in the u.k. is for passage of a financial transaction tax (ftt) - in britain termed a "robin hood tax." an ftt is a sales tax aimed at speculative trading and would raise up to $350 billion a year in the u.s. alone.

"nurses see what this economy is doing to our communities in stress, dislocation, and poverty," said karen higgins, rn and nnu co-president. "we are going out in support of unison, drawing the line against cuts to retirement security and other essentials for working families."

International solidarity and support is a good thing. The healthcare and insurance companies are increasingly international. My hospital outsourced food service and housekeeping to a British company, for just one small example. In order to match their power and fight them on an equal footing we are going to have to reach out to workers in other countries - form alliances, work together.

Specializes in Critical care, tele, Medical-Surgical.

u.s. nurses support millions of striking uk workers

"these plans are just a cynical move to raise £4 billion to pay down the deficit caused by the bankers. instead of raiding the pensions of hard working public service workers, why not impose a tiny transaction tax on the banks instead-this would raise £20 billion a year?"-karen jennings, assistant general secretary of unison, which represents tens of thousands of nurses and other healthcare worker.

in the u.s., national nurses united is leading the call for a financial transaction tax on wall street. the tax would tax wall street to heal main street. similar taxes are being proposed by workers around the world. nurses are rallying today to show their support for british nurses and workers whose pensions are in jeopardy.

http://protestintheusa.org/2011/12/01/u-s-nurses-support-millions-of-striking-british-workers/

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