Sunday Independent (Ireland)

NURSES’ SHOW OF FORCE

Government considers compromise as tens of thousands march in support of health staff

- Micheal O Scannail

INCREASES to allowances paid to nurses are being examined in the Labour Court as a solution to prevent further strikes.

The move would be major compromise on the Government side after weeks of insisting it would not bow to the nurses’ pay demands.

Industrial relations talks have intensifie­d in recent days as the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisati­on (INMO) plans three days of strike action this week.

Last night, senior INMO figures along with high-ranking officials from the Department of Health and Department of Public Expenditur­e and Reform were locked in Labour Court talks. Irish Congress of Trade Unions president Patricia King was also involved in the negotiatio­ns.

“For the first time, people are working really hard on all sides to resolve this,” a wellplaced source said.

It is understood all sides are working toward finding a solution within the terms of the current public sector pay deal.

This could result in a twopart solution which would see a long-term process establishe­d to address pay and conditions while more immediate non-pay related compromise­s are also being discussed. This includes looking at allowances paid to nurses. “There are lots of ways nurses could be supported that are not direct pay,” a source said.

In a potent show of support, tens of thousands of people attended a rally in Dublin city centre yesterday in support of nurses.

The Psychiatri­c Nurses Associatio­n (PNA) has escalated its campaign of industrial action over pay and staffing issues and announced three further 24-hour work stoppages later this month in addition to this week’s action.

Last Friday the HSE expressed concern to the Government over patient safety if 40,000 INMO and PNA members walk out on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

During yesterday’s rally nurses said they had reached “crisis point”.

The group marched from the Garden of Remembranc­e on Parnell Square to Government Buildings. They are calling for pay parity to bring nurses’ salaries in line with other health profession­als.

Fiona Leahy, who works as a nurse in Limerick, said her colleagues were at breaking point. “Things are unsafe, we don’t have enough nurses to care for the patients,” she said. “I think the Government are hoping that the longer this goes on, the public might not be with us. But the public has been amazing so far, so I just hope that support stays.”

A Dublin-based nurse said hospitals were understaff­ed due to the pay and conditions.

“We need more nurses. The fact is we can’t get them in and we can’t get them to stay,” said the woman, who identified herself only as Roisin.

“I love nursing but it’s becoming incredibly difficult. We’re crying out for even agency staff but that’s even drying up.”

INMO president Martina Harkin-Kelly stressed that those involved in the rally would rather be at work, but she added that the treatment of nurses and midwives needed to improve if the standard of care was to improve.

“Nurses and midwives are united and the public stand with us. Now it’s time for the Government to make serious proposals to avert more strikes,” she said.

INMO general secretary Phil Ni Sheaghdha said that in 2019 there were no further arguments left to deny nurses and midwives equal pay.

“Equal pay for nurses with other graduates is something we have strived for, is something that we seek and it’s something that we intend to get. Because without it, nursing and midwifery will still be considered a little bit of a vocation and a little bit of ‘girls going to work’ and girls just not having the right to stand up for themselves,” she said.

In a speech at the rally, PNA general secretary Peter Hughes said that, by 2021, 34pc of psychiatri­c nurses in the State would be eligible for retirement. He added that as many as 3,000 children were on waiting lists for first-time mental health assessment­s, saying this was “a national disgrace”. Minister Simon Harris reiterated the Government’s willingnes­s to engage to end the dispute.

A spokesman said the minister was urging all parties to continue to work as hard as possible to reach a resolution.

Yesterday, speaking on the Marian Finucane radio show, former HSE director general Tony O’Brien said he held “pride” in the “tremendous work” of nurses but that the health service was the “wrong shape” and that the nurses were striking because no “meaningful engagement” had been offered by the HSE.

“Our system is upside down. For years we’ve prioritise­d hospitals over primary care,” he said. “I’m concerned that the most important medical relationsh­ip, which is our GP, is not necessaril­y going to be a relationsh­ip that people have in the future.”

 ?? Photo: Tom Honan ?? DEMANDS: Thousands marched in Dublin yesterday in support of striking nurses and midwives, calling on the Government to make serious proposals to resolve the dispute.
Photo: Tom Honan DEMANDS: Thousands marched in Dublin yesterday in support of striking nurses and midwives, calling on the Government to make serious proposals to resolve the dispute.
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 ?? Photos: Frank McGrath ?? SHOW OF STRENGTH: Main picture left, marchers head through Merrion Square in central Dublin yesterday at a rally in support of nurses’ and midwives’ pay campaign. Above and below, protesters make their point with placards
Photos: Frank McGrath SHOW OF STRENGTH: Main picture left, marchers head through Merrion Square in central Dublin yesterday at a rally in support of nurses’ and midwives’ pay campaign. Above and below, protesters make their point with placards
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 ??  ?? RALLYING CRY: Nurses chief Phil Ni Sheaghdha speaks out
RALLYING CRY: Nurses chief Phil Ni Sheaghdha speaks out

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