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Source: In These Times
On Thursday, over 2,700 Chicago-area nurses and support staff at Cook County Health (CCH) are planning to go on strike, the latest example of rising worker militancy in the healthcareĀ sector.
The National Nurses Organizing Committee (NNOC) and SEIU Local 73āāāwhich respectively represent 1,250 nurses and 1,500 medical aides, therapists, technicians, clerks, housekeepers, food service workers and patient transporters at CCHāāāhave each been in contract negotiations with the county since lastĀ fall.
Citing dramatic staffing shortages, the two unions are teaming up to demand CCH invest in employee recruitment and retention by improving pay andĀ benefits.
Rather than investing in long-term employees, the unions say CCH has been increasingly relying on temp workers hired through staffing agencies like SnapNurse. With the threat of aĀ walkout looming, management is aggressively trying to bring in even more temps to serve asĀ strikebreakers.
In TheseĀ Times obtained aĀ text blast sent out by SnapNurse last week seeking prospective scabs. Referencing āāa pending strike notice in Chicago,ā the text message explains that strikebreakers will be paid between $4,620 and $6,468 per weekāāāmore than regular CCH nurses make. āāRespond with STRIKE to deploy,ā the messageĀ says.
CCH and SnapNurse did not immediately respond to aĀ request for comment, but in an email to employees last week, CCHās recently hired CEO Israel Rocha, Jr. said management was āātaking all steps necessary to ensure the delivery of safe patient care in the event of aĀ strike.ā
āNurses are at the breaking point throughout the Cook County Health system,ā said Consuelo Vargas, an emergency room nurse at Stroger Hospital and aĀ chief representative of NNOC. āāWe need more nurses on staff, and we needed themĀ yesterday.ā
Consisting of Chicagoās Stroger and Provident Hospitals, as well as over aĀ dozen clinics in the city and suburbs, CCH is one of the nationās largest public health systems. Its predominantly Black and Brown patients are often uninsured or under-insured, meaning they delay seeking care and therefore face critical health needs. Stroger Hospital, which has the busiest emergency room in Illinois, treats the highest number of Chicagoās gunshot victims (and was the setting of the hit television show ER in theĀ 1990s).
The nurses and support staff say that instead of valuing their labor and listening to their concerns, the county has been dragging out negotiations, offering paltry raises that wouldnāt keep up with the cost of living and seeking to double the amount employees pay for healthĀ insurance.
āWe are striking because we are tired of being mistreated, undervalued, underserved, disrespected and cast aside,ā said Eugenia Harris, aĀ ward clerk at Stroger Hospital and SEIU Local 73Ā member.
The nurses plan to be on strike for 24Ā hours, but may call more strikes in the near future. The SEIU Local 73 membersāāāwho already held aĀ one-day work stoppage at CCH in Decemberāintend to hold an open-endedĀ strike.
āOur members are willing to strike for as long as it takes to achieve aĀ fair contract,ā SEIU Local 73 President Dian Palmer said. āāIt is time for Cook County to take these negotiationsĀ seriously.ā
Over the past 15 months, healthcare workers have been on the front lines of the Covid pandemic, organizing and striking in states like Illinois, Washington and New York to secure adequate personal protective equipment and safer staffing levels. In Massachusetts, union nurses at St. Vincent Hospital have been on strike for more than 100Ā daysāāāthe longest nurseās strike in the United States in over aĀ decade. Meanwhile, thousands of previously unorganized nurses in North Carolina and Maine successfully voted to unionize in recentĀ months.
The pandemic has fueled the uptick in healthcare worker militancy because it āārevealed to aĀ lot of us how little our employers care about our lives, and frankly how little they care about our patientsā lives,ā Elizabeth Lalasz, aĀ clinical nurse at Stroger Hospital and NNOC steward, told In TheseĀ Times.
Throughout the pandemic, Vargas said, āāhospital management has abused, disrespected and abandoned us. Because management treats nurses as expendable, we were not given adequate personal protective equipment, and over 150 of us tested positive forĀ Covid-19.ā
NNOC and SEIU Local 73 are calling on management to tap into some of the $998 million in federal funds Cook County is receiving from the American Rescue Plan to invest in the healthcareĀ workforce.
āEvery day we learn of another experienced nurse who resigned for aĀ better job because Cook County has failed to provide them with the resources they need to provide the best care to their patients,ā Vargas explained. āāWith each loss of an experienced nurse, we see years of skills and expertise vanish. In one six-week period, IĀ saw aĀ hundred years of experience walk out of myĀ department.ā
CCH CEO Rochaās salary is $650,000 aĀ year. His predecessor, who was dismissed by the Cook County Board of Commissioners in late 2019, received $542,000 in severanceĀ pay.
āIt doesnāt make any sense for upper management to be making that kind of money when we desperately need people to be recruited and retained,ā Lalasz said. āāWe need money for staff and support on the front lines, not for money to be given upwards, orĀ pocketed.ā
This would be the third time in the past two years that SEIU Local 73 went on strike in conjunction with aĀ fellow union. In 2019, Local 73 workers at Chicago Public Schools hit the picket lines alongside their colleagues in the Chicago Teachers Union. And last year, 4,000 Local 73 workers at the University of Illinois at Chicago went on strike at the same time as hundreds of UIC nurses with the Illinois NursesĀ Association.
Besides its members at CCH, nearly 1,000 SEIU Local 73 members at Cook County Jail and other county offices are also set to strike onĀ Thursday.
Both Local 73 and NNOC have expressed disappointment in Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, who is the ultimate decision-maker on managementās side. Preckwinkle, who doubles as the chair of the Cook County Democratic Party, unsuccessfully ran for Chicago mayor in 2019 on aĀ pro-union platform with the backing of Chicagoās progressiveĀ unions.
āFor years Iāve worked in politics, particularly with Toni Preckwinkle, who said she would work with the unions to ensure they had contracts with fair wages. Sheās turned her back on us,ā said veteran civil rights activist James Phipps, aĀ Local 73 member who works at the county clerkāsĀ office.
Preckwinkle did not immediately respond to aĀ request for comment, but she issued aĀ statement last week calling the staffing shortage at CCH āāa mutually shared concern.ā Regarding managementās demand to raise health insurance costs for workers, she said it has been six years since the last hike and that aĀ new increase āāis needed in this round ofĀ bargaining.ā
āIt doesnāt matter, you have aĀ billion dollars in Covid relief money and yet youāre asking us to double our healthcare and only take aĀ minimal increase in pay,ā Lalasz said in response to Preckwinkleās statement. āāWe shouldnāt be the people who are sufferingā¦Without us doing the work we do, this hospital system will notĀ function.ā
Jeff Schuhrke has been aĀ Working In These Times contributor since 2013. He has aĀ Ph.D. in History from the University of Illinois at Chicago and aĀ Masterās in Labor Studies from UMass Amherst. Follow him on Twitter: @JeffSchuhrke
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