Nearly 2,000 nurses, represented by the United Steelworkers Local 4-200, launched a strike at the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, New Jersey, after rejecting a preliminary contract proposal.
The strike began at 7 a.m. on Friday and was initiated after a series of unsuccessful contract talks.
The nurses, who had been picketing outside the hospital, expressed their motivation to ensure the well-being of each patient in every hospital department.
Their demands revolve around implementing definite staffing ratios to maintain patient safety, as currently, only non-binding guidelines exist.
The Union’s leadership emphasizes the necessity for accountability regarding staffing, pointing to an ongoing crisis in the nursing profession with people leaving bedside care. They are urging the hospital to invest in hiring and keeping nursing staff.
According to the President of USW4-200, Judy Danella, the Union is committed to holding out until their demands, particularly staffing-related, are met.
Danella said, “We just want safe staffing. We want it put into our contract so that every day we go in there, we know our staffing is safe.”
“We wanted more stability that if a nurse, say, in the middle of the shift needs something, that there would be somebody that they could send to help, or that’s looked at in the beginning of the day to make sure that the staffing is appropriate,” she added.
Further concerns include escalating health insurance costs and the need for additional support for nurses during their shifts.
Despite the hospital administration terming the strike as unnecessary and advising the Union to negotiate, the nurses insist that the issue is not about increased wages but more nursing presence at the bedside.
The hospital has countered, stating that the Union declined a contract proposal that offered increased remuneration and staffing solutions, and alleged the Union’s demands had been met twice already. However, the Union contends that the proposed solutions had exploitable flaws which disadvantaged the nurses.
The strike, the first since 2006, has left the hospital working with an external nursing agency to maintain normal operations for at least 60 days.