The Guardian (USA)

Minnesota nurses launch three-day strike over pay and understaff­ing

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Thousands of nurses in Minnesota launched a three-day strike Monday over issues of pay and what they say is understaff­ing that has been worsened by the strains brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The labor action includes 15,000 nurses and seven healthcare systems in the Twin Cities and Duluth areas. Those groups have recruited temporary nurses and say they expect to maintain most services.

Nurses were seeking more than 30% increases in compensati­on by the end of the three-year contract. Hospitals have offered 10% to 12%.

The Minnesota Nurses Associatio­n said that unless benefits are substantia­lly improved, the continued loss of nurses will leave hospitals vulnerable.

“They need to see it as the crisis that it is,” union president Mary Turner said when nurses gave notice in August of their strike plans. “We’ve said over and over that this isn’t something we do lightly, but we’re not going to just sit back and do nothing. We can’t.”

Hospitals have argued that the proposals by the union and its nurses are too costly.

“It just isn’t a realistic number,” Paul Omodt, a spokesman for several of the Minneapoli­s-area hospitals, said last month.

Union officials say 15 hospitals would be affected by the strike, including those operated by Allina Health, M Health Fairview, Children’s Hospital, North Memorial and HealthPart­ners in the Twin Cities, and Essentia and St Luke’s in Duluth.

When Minnesota nurses went on a one-day strike in 2010, hospitals hired 2,800 replacemen­t nurses, called in extra non-union staff and reduced patient levels. Some hospitals reschedule­d elective surgeries.

 ?? Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA ?? The Minnesota Nurses Associatio­n said that unless benefits are substantia­lly improved, the continued loss of nurses will leave hospitals vulnerable.
Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA The Minnesota Nurses Associatio­n said that unless benefits are substantia­lly improved, the continued loss of nurses will leave hospitals vulnerable.

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