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OR nurses push for new union contract with informational picket

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Thursday, August 1, 2024   

Nurses with an expired union contract in Oregon are holding an informational picket on Friday. Negotiations on a contract with Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital in Newport started in April, but the two sides have yet to reach a deal. The nurses are represented by the Oregon Nurses Association. Their contract expired on June 30th.

Brook Clark, a registered nurse at the hospital and member of the union, wants Samaritan to bring its pay up equal to other Samaritan hospitals. Clark also noted that about a quarter of staff are traveling nurses.

"That cost is really going to eat into our budget as an organization and that cost is going to eventually trickle down to our patients and our community," she said.

Traveling nurses are paid more than local nurses. The Oregon Nurses Association notes Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital is one of the most profitable hospitals in the state. A bargaining session takes place on Friday. The nurses have also an informational picket planned for Friday. Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital CEO Lesley Ogden says the talks are on the right path and he hopes they'll agree to a package "that is competitive in our market and will help Samaritan retain and attract the best nurses to care for our patients and the communities we serve."

Clark says housing, child care and other living costs are higher in Newport, and added that the hospital has struggled to stay fully staffed at times.

"Even with the travelers, we still have very regular holes in our staffing that are due to the fact that we can't recruit and retain nurses out here on the coast," she explained.

Clark added the nurses at her hospital do the same work as other nurses in the Samaritan system and their wages should reflect that.

"It really comes down to just the principle of things. It comes down to treating our nurses equally, fairly, and treating us with respect," she said.

Nurses at Samaritan Albany General Hospital reached a deal with their managers on a new contract earlier this week.

Disclosure: Oregon Nurses Association (AFT Local 5905) contributes to our fund for reporting on Civic Engagement, Health Issues, Livable Wages/Working Families, Mental Health. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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