Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Wed, Jul 11, 2018 at 5:11 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Nurses demonstrating across from the hospital
The University of Vermont Medical Center and its nurses' union can agree on one thing — patients should still feel comfortable entering the hospital amidst a nursing strike planned for Thursday and Friday. The union and hospital still do not agree on nursing wages and were scheduled to engage in a last-ditch bargaining session Wednesday afternoon.
If the two sides do not reach a resolution, union members and supporters will rally and then picket starting at 6 a.m. Thursday on public property surrounding the main hospital. More demonstrations are expected at the hospital's other campuses, including Fanny Allen in Colchester, Essex Adult Primary Care and a dialysis center in St. Albans.
The hospital and the nurses’ union have both stressed that picketers outside the hospital want to raise awareness for the union and will not prevent patients or healthcare providers from entering the hospital. No entrances to hospitals or hospital parking lots will be blocked by picketers, and patients can expect to attend appointments without fear of harassment.
“We would never interfere with patients or patient care in any way,” said Samira Lawson, a UVM Medical Center registered nurse and member of the union’s bargaining committee. “Our goal is for patients to feel safe and feel like they can come to the hospital.”
Tags:
UVM Medical Center
,
nurses
,
strike
,
wages
,
contract negotiations
,
labor
,
union
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 4:51 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
The hospital's chief operating officer Eileen Whalen (center) and Dr. Isabelle Desjardins at Tuesday's press conference
The University of Vermont Medical Center has postponed 68 elective procedures that require complex surgical teams in advance of a nursing strike planned for Thursday and Friday, July 12 and 13.
Chief medical officer Dr. Isabelle Desjardins said at a press conference Tuesday that patients were contacted and given the option to reschedule their surgeries for later in the month. Emergency medical care will still be available 24-7 and outpatient services will continue as normal, according to Desjardins.
Nearly 600 temporary nurses are currently in Burlington receiving two days of training before the union work stoppage. Desjardins said there is no cause for concern about patient safety during the strike.
Samira Lawson, a member of the nurses' union bargaining committee, disagreed.
"If they were really not concerned, they would not cancel any surgeries," she said after the press conference.
Tags:
nurses
,
strike
,
UVM Medical Center
,
labor
,
staffing
,
shortage
,
hospital
,
Eileen Whalen
,
Julie MacMillan
,
Llu Mulvaney-Stanek
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Sat, Jul 7, 2018 at 9:08 AM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Nurses at a honk-and-wave rally outside the hospital
Updated at 6:45 pm.
No deal was reached during Friday night negotiations between the University of Vermont Medical Center and its nurses, and less than a week remains until nurses plan to strike. On Saturday, the union and hospital both released statements announcing that bargaining will continue Monday and Tuesday afternoons without a federal mediator.
Tags:
UVM Medical Center
,
nurses
,
strike
,
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Fri, Jul 6, 2018 at 6:20 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Sanders with union vice president Deb Snell and lead negotiator Julie MacMillan
Updated 9:51 p.m.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) criticized administrators of the University of Vermont Medical Center and called on them to meet face-to-face with hospital nurses during a press conference at his Burlington office on Friday.
More than 1,000 nurses are prepared to strike on July 12 and 13 amid contentious contract negotiations. Nurses are calling for salary parity with the nurses at Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital in Plattsburgh, N.Y., which is a member of the UVM Health Network. The union says the hospital is dangerously understaffed because low salaries create long-term vacancies and high turnover rates.
Tags:
Senator
,
Bernie Sanders
,
UVMMC
,
strike
,
nurses
,
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Thu, Jul 5, 2018 at 3:14 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Union members and supporters at a press conference Monday morning announcing the strike notice
Updated 4:04 p.m.
With a week left until a nursing strike, the University of Vermont Medical Center has scheduled a bargaining session on Friday with its nurses' union. The time, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., was chosen after discussions involving both sides, according to Hospital spokesman Michael Carrese.
He sent out a press release Thursday announcing the session and stating the hospital administration’s hope that a strike might still be averted. The hospital has maintained that it will be prepared to provide quality care to patients in the event of a strike.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) waded into the fray Thursday, releasing a statement in support of nurses and announcing a joint press conference with the nurses' union on Friday afternoon.
“Nurses are the backbone of the UVM Medical Center," Sanders' written statement said. "They work day and night to treat our family members and to keep our community healthy. Patient care suffers when these dedicated professionals are not treated with respect and do not receive adequate compensation.”
The nurse’s bargaining team voted on Saturday to serve a strike notice Monday. Nurses are required by law to give hospitals 10 days advance notice of their intent to strike. If no agreement is reached, the nurses will strike on July 12 and 13.
Tags:
UVM Medical Center
,
nurses
,
strike
,
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Taylor Dobbs
on Tue, Jul 3, 2018 at 6:19 PM
University of Vermont Medical Center is making plans to fly hundreds of out-of-town nurses to Burlington to fill in if its nurses strike for two days next week. A staffing agency is recruiting nurses online and reserving local hotel rooms.
Hotel Vermont general manager Joseph Carton said Tuesday morning that an agency tried to reserve 600 rooms in Burlington. Hotel Vermont, which has 125 rooms, could not accommodate the entire request. But the agency ultimately reserved 32 rooms between Hotel Vermont and the Courtyard Burlington Harbor next door, which is owned by the same company, Carton said.
Tags:
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
strike
,
nurse
,
Hotel Vermont
,
Courtyard Burlington Harbor
,
Laurie Aunchman
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Mon, Jul 2, 2018 at 7:00 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Nurses' union president Laurie Aunchman, right, and negotiator Julie MacMillan speaking to reporters
The University of Vermont Medical Center nurses have served the hospital a 10-day notice for a strike on July 12 and 13, the union announced at a press conference outside the hospital on Monday.
Members of the union’s bargaining team voted unanimously on Saturday morning to serve the notice. As word got around, the hospital scheduled another bargaining session on Sunday, but the two sides were unable to find common ground. The nurses' three-year contract expires on July 9.
Earlier in June, members of the nurses' union voted overwhelmingly to authorize their bargaining team to serve a strike notice. If those nurses leave work, it could mean trouble for Vermont's only trauma center with a Level 1 designation, meaning it provides the most comprehensive care. The hospital's administration maintains it will keep the place running smoothly in the event of a strike, but the nurses express skepticism.
Tags:
UVM
,
nurses
,
union
,
strike
,
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Sat, Jun 30, 2018 at 5:12 PM
This story was updated at 7:20 p.m.
University of Vermont Medical Center nurses plan to serve the hospital on Monday morning with a 10-day notice of a two-day labor strike.
Keith Brunner, a spokesperson for the Vermont Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals, on Saturday announced a press conference at 11:30 a.m. Monday to reveal a “critical development” in contract negotiations. Prior to the press release, a UVM Medical Center nurse informed
Seven Days that a strike notice will be served Monday. Brunner confirmed that Monday’s press conference is to announce that notice.
Tags:
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
strike
,
nurses
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Fri, Jun 29, 2018 at 9:32 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
An ambulance, a firetruck and a police car were among the automobiles that honked support for the nurses Thursday.
With 10 days left until its contract expires, the bargaining committee for the nurse's union at the University of Vermont Medical Center was preparing for a late night of negotiations Friday. The union had yet to serve the hospital a strike notice.
On June 13, the union announced that 1,227 of its 1,800 members voted to give the union's bargaining team
the authority to issue a notice to the hospital of a potential two-day strike if a new contract isn't agreed to before the current one expires July 9. The nurses are required by law to give the hospital 10 days' notice before walking off the job.
If the nurses were to strike, it could mean a labor shortage at the only level one trauma center in the region. Nurses have asserted that they are the backbone of the hospital, while UVM Medical Center officials have repeatedly said it's prepared to continue providing quality care to patients in the event of a strike. The hospital has made arrangements with an outside firm that would provide temporary workers.
When the strike votes were first tallied, union leaders suggested they would serve a strike notice Friday if their demands had not been met. But for now, they plan to continue negotiating in good faith.
Tags:
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
nurses
,
strike
,
union
,
labor
,
hospital
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Sara Tabin
on Wed, Jun 13, 2018 at 12:17 PM
click to enlarge
Sara Tabin
Union leaders, including Julie MacMillan, center, cross the street to make their announcement.
Updated at 6 p.m.
An overwhelming majority of the University of Vermont Medical Center’s nurses voted to authorize their union's bargaining committee to call for a two-day strike if its demands are not met when the nurses' contract runs out July 9.
Dozens of nurses gathered outside the hospital at 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday for the vote result announcement. They cheered and clapped as union leaders came out of the hospital’s McClure Entrance and crossed the street to a picnic area in front of the building. Julie MacMillan, the union’s lead negotiator, announced the vote tally: 1,311 of the 1,800 union members voted, and 1,227 — 94 percent — said yes to a strike.
As the end of the nurses’ three-year contract comes comes ever closer, union negotiators
have been playing hardball at the bargaining table. They have refused to meet with a national negotiator and have held press conferences and public demonstrations about what they say are public safety issues stemming
from understaffing at the hospital.
The nurses claim low pay and high costs of living are preventing the hospital from retaining the number of nurses it needs to adequately care for patients. Eileen Whalen, hospital president and chief operating officer, estimated that the nurses’ average pay is $64,000 — less than the national average of $73,550 in 2017, according to U.S. Department of Labor statistics.
Tags:
Burlington
,
nurses
,
labor
,
union
,
Julie MacMillan
,
Deb Snell
,
Eileen Whalen
,
University of Vermont Medical Center
,
Image
,
Web Only