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Submitted by Joe638NYC on Mon, 03/24/2008 - 5:26am.
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From CNA, the California Nurses Association site:

Huge Walkout by 4,000 Sutter RNs
A Dramatic Stand for Improved Patient Care 10-Day Strike Underway Across Bay Area
Some
4,000 registered nurses began a 10-day walkout Friday at 10 Bay Area
hospitals operated by the Sutter Health chain in a dramatic protest
over patient care conditions. More than 95 percent of the RNs struck
the hospitals. Guaranteeing safe RN staffing at all times -- especially
ensuring that Sutter RNs are able to take rest breaks and meals -- is
one of several key patient safety issues that is at the center of the
dispute.
Associated Press (3/21/08)
About
4,000 nurses at eight Sutter Health hospitals in the San Francisco Bay
area started striking Friday over a dispute about health care and
pension benefits and the closing of hospitals in poor areas. The strike
is expected to last 10 days. It affects hospitals in Antioch, Berkeley,
Burlingame, Castro Valley, Oakland, San Francisco, San Mateo and
Vallejo.
Hospital officials said they have brought in
replacement nurses and that patient care won't be disrupted. All
hospitals remain open. The California Nurses Association says the
walkout was triggered by ongoing contract negotiations and Sutter
practices that it says puts patients at risk.
Sutter Health said
it has met the levels of staffing, health care and retirement benefits
the union has demanded from other hospitals. It said the union's "real
goal is more members and more dues money." Shum Preston, spokesman for
the California Nurses Association, said that claim "is not what nurses
are about. It's not why nurses are out here."
The California
Nurses Association and its national arm, the National Nurses Organizing
Committee, have a total of about 80,000 members in 50 states.
From CBS5 in CA (3/23/08):
Nurses To Protest Hospital Closure In SF
SAN
FRANCISCO (BCN) ― Striking nurses will be marching through the streets
of San Francisco Monday to protest Sutter Health's possible closure of
St. Luke's Hospital.
Some 4,000 registered nurses from the
California Nurses Association began striking at 7 a.m. Friday to prove
to Sutter Health they are serious about negotiating a new contract.
This strike is the third the association has called since October, as
well as being the longest walkout of the three.
A Blue Ribbon
Panel has been convened to discuss the future of St. Luke's Hospital.
The panel hopes to produce a viable plan for acute care and outpatient
services at the hospital, California Pacific Medical Center spokesman
Kevin McCormack said.
McCormack also said that there are no
plans to close the hospital and officials are merely reviewing their
options on what services to offer at the facility. St. Luke's Hospital
falls under the umbrella of California Pacific Medical Center in San
Francisco.
Nurses at California Pacific marked the second day of
their 10-day strike with a rally at noon Saturday. CNA spokesman Chuck
Idelson said the rally went very well thanks to the "spirited group" of
people who attended.
"We had quite a few nurses that were here, as well as representatives from community organizations," Idelson said.
Registered
nurse Jonica Brooks said nurses are hoping the 10-day strike will push
hospital officials back to the bargaining table. "We are ready to go
back to the table unconditionally and at any time," she said.
Hospitals
affected by the strike include St. Luke's Hospital and California
Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, San Leandro Hospital, Alta
Bates-Summit Medical Center in Berkeley and Oakland, Mills-Peninsula
Health Services in Burlingame and San Mateo, Eden Medical Center in
Castro Valley, Sutter Delta in Antioch and Sutter Solano in Vallejo.
Representatives
for the nurses have said they are striking to protest what they
consider serious patient care issues including safe staffing even
during rest and meal breaks, medical benefits and pension improvements.
The nurses association is also protesting Sutter's alleged attempt to
close three community hospitals in the Bay Area that serve a patient
population that is poorer and composed of more people of color than
other Sutter hospitals. Read Full Story
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