On Thursday, Bill Cruice had his first
"quickie" and it was good.
Now for definitions: Cruice is executive director of the
Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Processionals (PASNAP), the
union that, as of Thursday, represents 100 nurses at Eagleville Hospital in
Montgomery County.
"Quickie" was the pejorative name given by
opponents to sped-up union election procedures enacted by the National Labor
Relations Board on April 14.
As for good, "it's a good feeling that the workers
are going to have a better chance" at having a union, said Cruice, who has
led 35 organizing campaigns.
From his viewpoint, the results also are good - 73 in
favor, eight opposed, and 10 contested likely yes votes.
"While we are disappointed, we will be negotiating
with elected representatives," a hospital spokesman said Friday.
The new rules quicken the process between petitioning the
NLRB for an election and the election itself - leaving less time, the unions
say, for union-busting intimidation.
Opponents, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and
other business groups, say the new rules don't give employers time to convince
workers that unions won't help them.
"If you have a short time, the tone changes. It
becomes harsher. You don't have time for the niceties," said Brent Yessin
of Yessin & Associates, a Florida firm that consults with companies hoping
to avoid unions.
Cruice, a lawyer, explained the changes: Under the new
rules, an election petition filed with the NLRB leads to a hearing within eight
days to set an election date. Then and now, both sides try to agree on the
election date and who should be allowed to vote.
In the past, if there was an agreement, the election
would be held in about 42 days. That's been shortened to "the earliest
date practicable."
Under the old rules, if the two sides couldn't agree, the
election process would halt during a long course of appeals and brief-filing.
Under the new rules, most of the preelection arguing and
brief-writing has been eliminated, particularly if the contested group of
workers is so small that it wouldn't likely affect the outcome. Employers can
contest those ballots at the end.
Nurses unhappy with working conditions at the nonprofit
drug, alcohol, and psychiatric hospital called the union.
On June 11, union organizers met nurses at the Keystone
Grill in Norristown.
There, the nurses received their inoculations over fried
onion rings and mugs of coffee.
"In some ways, it's no different from a nurse
inoculating someone with a vaccine," Cruice said. "This is our
vaccine, inoculating them against the poison" from management.
What they heard fromunion organizers was a list of all
the bad things that might happen to them once they filed an election petition
with the NLRB.
The nurses learned about harsh one-on-one meetings, about
the possibility of being closely monitored at work, about how officials might
plead for a chance to make things right, how people might be fired for minor
infractions previously tolerated, how shifts might be changed to hurt
ringleaders.
Cruice said unions, worried about intimidation, usually
won't present an election petition unless they have 60 to 70 percent of the
workers signing it. That's what the union had when it filed with the NLRB on
July 29for the Eagleville nurses. The election was set for Thursday.
The hospital, Cruice said, responded swiftly, bringing in
consultants, who visited nurses on their floors. Management held meetings,
pleading for another chance. Two union supporters were fired and a popular
nurse-safety officer was suspended. The union responded, filing NLRB
unfair-labor-practice charges.
The difference, union organizer Mark Warshaw said, was
that it was over in 22 days.
"Once [workers] see a light at the end of the tunnel
and it's coming soon, they are able to withstand anything," he said.
"When it's dragging, month after month, it's more difficult."
Nurse Heather Jones-DiRosa said she loves her job and
wants communication, scheduling, and morale problems to be resolved.
"People are still nervous and afraid of retaliation," she said.
"I'm thankful it's over. It's been an unsettling time. We want to get back
to caring for our patients."
Source: Philly.com
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