Los Angeles Times

Nurses union and county reach deal

Tentative agreement averts strike by 7,000 healthcare workers over patient loads.

- By Nina Agrawal nina.agrawal@latimes.com Twitter: @agrawalnin­a

Los Angeles County officials and the labor union representi­ng the county’s nurses reached an 11th-hour deal Monday night to avert a strike that was set to begin Tuesday morning.

“Los Angeles County is gratified that the bargaining committee of SEIU Local 721 has reached a tentative agreement with the county,” county Chief Executive Sachi A. Hamai said in a statement late Monday night.

“This means that the county’s registered nurses will remain on the job, serving vulnerable patients who depend on them and preventing widespread service disruption­s that a strike would have caused across our massive healthcare system,” Hamai said.

Union representa­tives called the deal a victory for nurses.

“I am so proud of our registered nurses,” union President Bob Schoonover said in a statement. “Because of their determinat­ion and their compassion for their patients, we are on a real pathway to finally solving our nurse retention crisis.”

The union said it had secured additional funding to help retain more nurses.

It had been bargaining with the county for months and reached an impasse over staffing issues, with nurses contending that they were being forced to violate state limits on patient-tonurse ratios and that an inadequate number of nurses at county facilities was jeopardizi­ng patient safety.

More than 7,000 nurses, including those who worked in emergency rooms, operating rooms and intensive care units, had planned to begin a four-day strike Tuesday morning.

About 200 nurses deemed essential to patient safety would have been given “line passes” and continued to work, and the county was preparing to authorize its health department to take additional steps to provide care to patients during the strike.

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