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  • Your Union At Work

    Posted by Kim on April 15th, 2008 / Print This Post Print This Post



    From California:

    LOS ANGELES, April 11 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The California Nurses Association/National Nurses Association today condemned the Service Employees International Union for targeting CNA/NNOC leaders and members with threats and intimidation, stalking them at home and in patient care units at hospitals.

    In a statement today, CNA/NNOC — the nation’s largest RN union — demanded SEIU International President Andrew Stern “immediately renounce the actions of SEIU staff and cease and desist these despicable attacks against anyone who speaks out against his pro-corporate agenda.”

    “SEIU’s behavior, sending swarms of staff to threaten women in their homes, is especially disgraceful, and another illustration of their contempt for a predominantly female profession that they treat as chattel in so much of their activity, including trying to force RNs into his union,” said CNA/NNOC Executive Director Rose Ann DeMoro.

    Roving bands of SEIU staff, four or five at a time, arrived on the doorsteps of at least two CNA/NNOC female Board members in Southern California Thursday, with video cameras to film their abusive exploits.

    Is this what we pay dues for?

    “Union membership is about collective democracy. Nurses decide they need a union and then choose the union of their choice,” Cuaresma said. “We will continue to give voice on behalf of our patients and we will never be intimidated in our struggle to defend our ratios and our hard-won benefits. Stern should rethink his strategy — he will not intimidate me or the CNA.”

    Thursday’s attacks on CNA/NNOC Board members are the latest escalation by the Service Employees Union which has in internal conversations bragged about its intent to “destroy” CNA/NNOC for challenging SEIU’s practices which the RNs say compromise patient safety, erode RN standards and professional practice, and undermine workplace and union democracy.

    Also on Thursday, CNA/NNOC obtained a letter from an SEIU staffer who resigned in disgust with the behavior of SEIU International and quoted a top SEIU official bragging of plans “targeting ten to fifteen C.N.A. bargaining units.”

    SEIU’s corporate partnerships compromise patient safety

    Perhaps the most egregious behavior of SEIU International, says CNA/NNOC are its deals with corporate hospitals and nursing homes, sacrificing patient safety for agreements to help it recruit more SEIU members.

    For example, SEIU has signed pacts with nursing home operators in California and Washington state agreeing to lobby for the nursing home chains. Under the 2003 California deal, SEIU agreed to oppose legislation requiring nursing homes to provide enough staff to keep patients safe and healthy, and to not report health care violations to state regulators except when required by law.

    Five years later, according to a report cited in the Los Angeles Times this week, despite increased state funding for nursing homes, the direct result of SEIU lobbying, nursing homes are spending less in California on direct patient care, and reports of patient mistreatment have shot up 38%.

    Similarly, in partnership with hospital corporations, SEIU lobbied in California against the RN-to-patient minimum ratio law, and worked to erode the law after it was enacted.

    Unions should work for the people who pay them to represent them. Not against them. Clearly the SEIU has held the hands of nursing home industry leaders, who have goals that are not in favor of good patient care. We might think unions are a good thing, but we should be careful consumers (that would be me and you!) when it comes to what a union really offers, AND how it operates behind closed doors.

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