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As Pandemic Rages, Health Care Unions Find a Voice

Health Care Unions Find a Voice in the Pandemic Faced with the urgent need to protect nurses and other frontline workers, labor organizations are pushing hospitals to do more. Kayla Wilson, a registered nurse, used her lunch break to join nurses demonstrating  last month against unsafe staffing practices at Good Samaritan Hospital in San Jose, Calif.Credit.Sarahbeth Maney for The New York Times Published Jan. 28, 2021Updated Jan. 29, 2021 The unions representing the nation’s health care workers have emerged as increasingly powerful voices during the still-raging pandemic. With more than 100,000 Americans hospitalized and many among their ranks infected, nurses and other health workers remain in a precarious frontline against the coronavirus and have turned again and again to unions for help.

Chicago Teachers Are Voting on Whether to Defy Monday s Reopening Order

Chicago educators are resisting the push back into classrooms. Some took personal days off January 15 and led a car caravan though the streets of Chicago to City Hall and the homes of members of the Board of Education. Photo: Joe Brusky UPDATE, January 25: Chicago teachers announced the vote results yesterday: With 86 percent of members voting, 71 percent voted to work remotely, defying the order that would have sent K-8 educators back into schools today (a week ahead of their students). The vote also authorized a strike if the district should retaliate by locking educators out of access to the remote learning system through Google Classroom. The district meanwhile has pushed its return order back from today to Wednesday, January 27. Editors.

Nursing home offers cash bonus for employees who get COVID-19 shot

Illinois Nurses Association files grievance against state, IDOC for hiring subcontractors

Illinois Nurses Association files grievance against state, IDOC for hiring subcontractors SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – The union representing 3,600 nurses across Illinois has filed a formal complaint against the state and the Department of Corrections. This comes after IDOC hired subcontractors to fill roles that were vacant for months during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Illinois Nurses Association says that decision left many union members out of the equation. The Department of Central Management Services contacted INA members about this change on December 11. Within a week, contracted nurses were already in IDOC facilities. The union submitted their complaint on December 16 on behalf of registered nurses working in the facilities. They believe the state bypassed their collective bargaining agreement by hiring the subcontractors.

Tired, numb and burned out: With hospitals short on workers, those remaining feel pushed to the edge by COVID-19

Tired, numb and burned out: With hospitals short on workers, those remaining feel pushed to the edge by COVID-19
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