MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Thousands of nurses at five Minnesota
hospitals are scheduled to go on strike at 7 a.m. Monday, Labor Day, in a
dispute over health insurance, workplace safety and staffing levels. Here's a
look at some of the issues:
WHICH HOSPITALS ARE INVOLVED?
They're all part of Minneapolis-based Allina Health —
Abbott Northwestern and the Phillips Eye Institute in Minneapolis, United in
St. Paul, Unity in Fridley and Mercy in Coon Rapids. About 4,800 nurses at
those hospitals are represented by the Minnesota Nurses Association, the union
that called the open-ended strike.
WHAT'S THE MAIN DISPUTE?
Health insurance.
In a move Allina estimates would save $10 million a year,
it wanted to switch nurses from their union-only health plans to ones that
cover all other Allina employees, meaning nurses would pay lower premiums but
have higher deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses.
That mirrors a national trend toward shifting costs on to
employees with higher deductibles and patients picking up more out-of-pocket
costs. The union has resisted, saying nurses are more prone to injuries and
illnesses because of the hazards of their jobs.
Allina has since altered its position, offering to let
the nurses keep their two most popular plans. But the union says that's a step
backward because Allina would pick up only 2 percent of whatever cost increases
the plans incur (the company later offered to increase the cap to 3 percent and
delay implementing the cap until 2019). The union also says the plans
eventually would become so expensive that the nurses would have to drop out and
the plans would die.
HOW WILL A STRIKE AFFECT PATIENT CARE?
Allina officials say it won't and didn't in June when
nurses at the five hospitals walked out for a week. The union disputes that.
The hospitals have been lining up replacement nurses, but that's an expensive
proposition. Bringing in 1,400 replacement workers from across the country was
a major reason why June's strike cost $20.4 million, Allina acknowledged in a
recent financial disclosure statement. The union says Allina has been
pressuring nurses to cross the picket lines and keep working.
WHAT'S THE STATUS OF NEGOTIATIONS?
The two sides met Friday with federal mediators. The
22-hour talks broke off early Saturday with no agreement on a new three-year
contract, and no new talks scheduled. The contract expired June 1.
HOW LONG COULD A STRIKE LAST?
Hard to say. Union leaders have said nurses will stay off
the job for as long as it takes. The June walkout was only scheduled to last a
week. The last big open-ended nurses' strikes in the Twin Cities lasted 23 days
in 2001 and 38 days in 1984.
Source: NJ Herald
No comments:
Post a Comment