The Oakland Press

Nurses, hospitals resume contract talks; some reach pact

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A possible strike by thousands of New York City nurses loomed Monday even as nurses at one hospital reached a tentative agreement hours before their contract was set to expire.

The pact affecting 4,000 nurses at NewYork-Presbyteri­an Hospital awaits ratificati­on.

Contract talks between nurses and seven other hospitals will resume this week to avert a strike by 12,000 other nurses as early as next Monday, Jan. 9. Their contracts expired Tuesday.

“Striking is always a last resort, but nurses say they are prepared to strike if hospital administra­tion gives them no other option to protect their patients and their practice,” the New York State Nurses Associatio­n said in a statement over the weekend.

The union issued a 10day notice that it intends to strike if an agreement isn’t reached. The advance notice is required by law to give hospitals to arrange for alternativ­e staffing.

The nurses have been calling for what they described as safe staffing levels, fair wages, no cuts to their health coverage, and health and safety protection­s in light of the “tripledemi­c” of COVID-19, RSV and flu.

They also want community benefits such as funding programs to recruit and train nurses from within the communitie­s they serve.

The seven hospitals where the nurses could strike include Montefiore, Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningsid­e and West, Maimonides, BronxCare, Richmond University Medical Center, and Flushing Hospital Medical Center.

Representa­tives of several hospitals said Friday they remained hopeful contract agreements will be reached before a strike but said they are prepared to bring in outside workers as a precaution as they face high patient volume.

The union congratula­ted its members at NewYorkPre­sbyterian Hospital on reaching a tentative agreement on what it called “a fair contract” hours before their contract expired.

The hospital said it was pleased to have reached a tentative agreement.

“With this agreement, which is still subject to ratificati­on by the nurses, we are making a significan­t investment in our outstandin­g nursing team and ensuring that we can continue to deliver the highest level of care to our patients,” the hospital said in a statement.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? RIGHT: Nurses at Montefiore Medical Center Moses Division hold a outside the hospital, demanding N95s and other critical personal protective equipment to handle the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020 in New York.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO RIGHT: Nurses at Montefiore Medical Center Moses Division hold a outside the hospital, demanding N95s and other critical personal protective equipment to handle the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020 in New York.

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