
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
19, No. 10 |
May 18 - 31, 2006 |



Montefiore Nurses Rally to Demand
Better Pay
By JAMES FERGUSSON
Registered Nurses (RNs) rallied last Friday for a better pay
increase than they have been offered by Montefiore Medical Center. The
nurses, represented by their union, the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA),
have been without a contract since January 2005.
Standing in front of Montefiore’s Moses Division on Gun Hill Road, about 70
nurses turned out to hear union representatives demand a pay increase more
in line with inflation, estimated at 4.5 percent by the union. In April,
nurses rejected, by eight to one, the Medical Center’s latest offer of a
three-percent pay increase on base salary, which is $60,528, according to
NYSNA. There are about 2,300 RNs at Montefiore.
Tomas Darby, a NYSNA labor representative, was particularly concerned that
the hospital’s offer only applied to base salary. In this way, he said, more
experienced, higher paid nurses, are being shortchanged, because their
percentage raise would be less than newcomers to the profession.
Judy Sheridan-Gonzalez, a Montefiore nurse and president of NYSNA’s
Montefiore/Moses division, charged that the hospital is trying to break the
back of the union. “We concerned they want to silence us,” she said.
Sheridan-Gonzalez pointed out that instead of trying to negotiate, the
Medical Center, in preparation for a strike, is hiring non-union nurses and
housing them in a Westchester hotel. Some are already working, and earning,
Sheridan-Gonzalez said, close to $1,000 a shift. “Clearly [Montefiore has]
the money to reach our modest offer,” she said.
Lola Fehr, executive director of NYSNA, is worried that Montefiore’s
position could affect staff morale. “If you lose morale,” she said, “you
lose energy… and all the things that make a successful hospital.”
The nurses, who sometimes struggled to hear the speakers since organizers
were denied a permit for a sound system, said the dispute goes deeper than
money. “It’s more than the salary,” said Andrea Williams, a Montefiore nurse
for the last six years. “I think it’s about respect. We are the backbone of
this place and we don’t have the staff and we don’t have a contract that
covers the cost of living. We’re professionals, not children.”
“A lot of people don’t realize how hard we work,” said nurse Juany Ramirez,
who has worked at the hospital for the last 15 years. “It’s gotten worse and
worse,” she continued, adding that nurses are responsible for more patients
than ever. Ramirez is hopeful that an agreement can be reached, but she’s
prepared to take the dispute further. “I think I would do it,” she said
sadly, when asked if she’s prepared to strike. “We don’t want to because of
the patients, but when push comes to shove we might have to do it.”
Officials of the city’s Transit Workers Union, which went on strike at the
end of last year, spoke at the rally to show solidarity with the nurses.
Montefiore would not respond to the specifics of the nurses’ charges but
issued the following statement:
“We respect and value our professional nursing staff and the exceptional
contributions they make to patient care every day. Because of that, we have
offered them [the nurses] a very competitive labor package that we even
enhanced with recommendations made by a federal mediator in order to bring
this contract to closure. We look forward to our next bargaining session on
May 17.”
Ed. note: The Norwood News is published by Mosholu
Preservation Corporation, a not-for-profit affiliate of Montefiore Medical
Center.
Back to News
Index Page

News | Opinion | Schools
| Features | Continuing Stories | Home
About Us | Past Issues
 |