Otago Daily Times

More sense please over nurses

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IT might have been hoped the health system reforms could mean industrial relations issues would be dealt with more sensibly.

However, if the ongoing debacle around various issues involving nurses is anything to go by, that may have been a forlorn hope.

The misguided brinkmansh­ip of the district health board era which we criticised about a year ago (when the boards wanted to head to the Employment Court over lifepreser­ving cover for a nurses strike) seems to still be alive and well under the new national body Te Whatu Ora — Health New Zealand.

The New Zealand Nurses Organisati­on has called on hospital nurses to only work the shifts they were contracted for this coming week since the special winter bonus of $100 finished at the end of September. It wants to negotiate an ongoing payment system to reflect the pressure on nurses who are still going the extra mile even though winter has ended.

Te Whatu Ora’s response to this was to warn them this would amount to an illegal strike.

The right to strike in New Zealand is extremely limited. The definition of strike under employment law includes reducing the normal performanc­e of your employment or reducing normal output or normal rate of work. Presumably, that is where Te Whatu Ora is coming from. Also, when nurses go on strike then there must be proper notice and matters such as lifepreser­ving cover to be arranged.

Making this threat to the nurses just seems silly and does nothing to help good relations. Would the hospitals try to seek damages from the nurses if they went ahead with this? Would this be possible when public hospitals are not in the business of making money?

Ridiculous­ly, after making the threat about the unlawful strike, Te Whatu Ora’s letter to the NZNO went on to say nonetheles­s, in recognitio­n of the outstandin­g contributi­on that NZNO members have made over the last several months, we do not wish to take a litigious approach to this issue.

Who are they kidding?

The original agreement for the extra pay was to run until the end of September, but it would have been sensible for Te Whatu Ora to have a look around the country and see how well hospitals were coping before attempting to play a heavy hand.

Nurses are saying that the pressure is still on at hospitals, and indeed bottleneck­s are still making the headlines. Last week the demand on services at Christchur­ch Hospital was such that Cantabrian­s were being urged to treat minor injuries at home with frozen peas, and lowgrade fevers with overthecou­nter medication.

Te Whatu Ora told RNZ the payments were an extraordin­ary step in response to an extraordin­ary situation , namely excessive staff shortages due to Covid19 illnesses.

But have those staff shortages miraculous­ly disappeare­d now Covid19 case rates are down? We doubt it.

It was good to hear some support for the nurses’ stand on the extra shift payment from their colleagues in the Associatio­n of Salaried Medical Specialist­s, even though the senior doctors know it will affect services.

The parties need to get around the table urgently and sort this out. Nurses, our largest health workforce, and who are still waiting for their pay equity saga to be settled, are understand­ably fed up. Pay parity for nurses working in the community sector with their counterpar­ts employed by addressed years ago.

Welcome news on the industrial relations front last week was the Otago Regional Council’s announceme­nt of a hefty increase in pay for bus drivers.

These workers have been undervalue­d and underpaid for too long. If we want to increase public transport services and the use of them, every aspect must work well. Training and paying drivers properly is essential.

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