SEIU RNs Welcome CNA/NNOC

SEIU RNs throughout California and the nation have had enough and have been signing up by the thousands to join their RN colleagues in the CNA/NNOC. Last December, RNs at Saint Mary's in Reno voted overwhelmingly for CNA/NNOC representation, rejecting SEIU's last minute attempt to derail the election and RNs at the St. Rose Dominican Hospitals in Las Vegas are voting in May to switch from SEIU to CNA.

Watch this video about how SEIU really operates as Las Vegas RNs and service employees speak from their hearts. SEIU members appearing in this video are not actors and were not paid or coaxed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cgueWv0C AY

This is not surprising.  
RNs and RN issues have received even less support from SEIU since the SEIU reorganization last year. And even though LA County is SEIU's largest RN unit in the nation, only one LA County RN was chosen to be a delegate to the SEIU convention even though note many LA County RNs ran for delegate positions.

As a direct care RN and as a patient advocate, I feel it's imperative that RNs belong to a union that supports the RN's duty and right to advocate in the exclusive interests of patients. I've seen how hospitals may try to cut corners by pushing for early discharge or transfer of patients who still need nursing care based on medical need.  

SEIU claims to represent 1.9 million members, of which actual RN membership is less than 2%. CNA/NNOC/AFL-CIO is the largest professional RN union in the country, with over 80,000 RN members in all 50 states with our Board of Directors and convention 100% RNs, directly elected by our all-RN membership.
The heart of the matter... lies in the fact that SEIU International has created a harmful company union structure where the "union" partners with management to the detriment of their members. This is especially dangerous and harmful when you represent healthcare workers who work in unsafe conditions and goes against a licensed nurse's ethical and legal obligation to be a patient advocate.  

The unfortunate outcomes harm patients as well as caregivers as detailed in a recent SF Weekly article.  The article is a must read from start to finish, but I feel compelled to excerpt the part about the tragic death of Mary Hochman, a night nurse and SEIU member who worked at Beverley La Cumbre, a Santa Barbara nursing home:
(Read the full story here http://www.sfweekly.com/2008-04-02/news/ nursing-home-lobbyist-quits-after-he-pre dicts-seiu-power-play/full)

According to news accounts, Hochman walked onto a beach and shot herself in the heart after a months-long dispute with her employer. Her problems began when she tried to report that a nurse's aide had hit an 81-year-old man with dementia. According to Contra Costa Times reporter Carolyn McMillan, Hochman said in a sworn affidavit that she was told to cover up the information.
"If a nurse cannot protect her patients, I do not want to be a nurse," Hochman wrote in her suicide note. "This has taken all hope away from me."

Hochman's note, along with a journal detailing instances where she was told to cover up incidents of abuse and neglect, helped spur a federal raid on the nursing home. A subsequent investigation revealed patients suffering beatings and maggot-infested bedsores, culminating in a $2 million settlement against Beverly relating to preventable deaths. The investigation also spawned a dozen civil suits, according to press reports.

SEIU had lobbied to ensure that a bill before the California legislature "didn't include provisions supported by patients' rights groups that would have set standards guaranteeing high-quality care. The union added hundreds of nursing home workers to its ranks. But the labor contracts that resulted included a scandalous detail: The union was discouraged from informing regulators, or the press, in cases of bad patient care.
CNA/NNOC is proud of our record in fighting for RNs and safe patient care, from winning the first-in-the nation RN-to-patient ratios, to fighting Governor Schwarzenegger's attacks on our ratios and on the Board of Registered Nurses to building a national nurse's movement to fight for the highest standards nationally for RNs and patients.

Building a national nurses movement isn't always going to be easy, but it will all be worth it when we change the face of healthcare in this country.

Visit our website www.calnurses.org  for more information.
Please also visit www.ServingEmployersInsteadofUs.org  to hear how SEIU is serving employers
rather than their nurses and other members.

Tags: CNA, Healthcare, NNOC, RN Union, SEIU (all tags)

Comments

3 Comments

CNA now trying to poach AFSCME and SEIU nurses

At a time when only 12.1% of workers in this country have union representation and there are 100,000 nurses in California who have no union, the California Nurses Association flew into Ohio to stop 8,000+ Ohio nurses and other healthcare workers from winning the right to form their union.  I've met some of these workers.  I am happy to put anyone who wants to listen in touch with them.  What the CNA did in Ohio was wrong.

And it's happening again.  It's happening in LA, it's happening in Nevada, and it's happening in Texas.

So you know, this isn't a CNA v. SEIU thing - it's more like CNA against every other union that would help nurses organize, including AFSCME, their fellow member in the AFL-CIO: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/head line/biz/5685564.html.

CNA dropped a leaflet on hospitals in LA Wednesday that said:

"Unhappy with the Service Employees Union?

Want to switch to the California Nurses Association?

CNA has been contacted by many county RNs unhappy with SEIU representation, asking if they can switch to representation by CNA. The answer is YES!"  (I am trying to get this online, but email me at media [at] seiu.org if you want the PDF).

More than 100,000 California nurses don't have a union at all, but instead of helping those nurses to form a union, CNA is spending a fortune in its members' dues money on efforts both inside and outside of CA to try to poach nurses who are already represented by unions.  I don't get it.

But it's not okay.

--Michelle Ringuette

http://www.shameonCNA.org

by mringuette 2008-04-11 07:06AM | 0 recs
Re: CNA now trying to poach AFSCME and SEIU nurses

Why do you call it poaching? I think these videos prove that they have legitimate reasons for wanting to leave. CNA/NNOC is a labor union and the professional "home" of 80,000 members in 50 states.

http://www.seiuvoice.org/2008/04/uhw-loc al-members-picket-parent-union.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVzpGYVbd Nw&eurl=http://www.seiuvoice.org/200 8/04/san-francisco-bay-guardian-less-per fect.html

by RN4MERCY 2008-04-19 01:36AM | 0 recs
Re: SEIU RNs Welcome CNA/NNOC

First of all, CNA/NNOC is not going after AFSCME membership. As a matter of fact we are working hand in hand with them at my hospital and have made a successful front against our employer, standing firm for our benefits.

The main flaw in your other argument is the notion of poaching. This is America. If something is deficient or does not serve your needs, it is perfectly fine to find the thing that is better. The freedom to change to something better can't be more American.

It is not poaching to open our arms to nurses who see CNA/NNOC as the better deal.

by Ludlow 2008-04-11 09:32PM | 0 recs

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