Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

After protracted negotiations that led to a strike last month, Contra Costa County nurses have reached a tentative agreement on a labor contract with the county, California Nurses Association officials announced Monday.

The new contract would introduce wage increases, protect benefits and prevent mandatory overtime, according to the association. The nurses will vote this week to potentially ratify the agreement, which would run through 2017.

Union officials consider the agreement a “major breakthrough” after 15 months of negotiations, which started when the previous contract expired.

County nurses participated in a two-day walkout and packed a Board of Supervisors meeting on Oct. 6 in hopes of hurrying along those negotiations and to ask for a favorable contract.

The nurses implored supervisors during a raucous public comment session that day to help stop county hospitals from “bleeding nurses,” as many left to pursue higher-paying private sector work. More than 100 nurses left in the past year, union officials said.

The county’s answer was a proposed 16% wage increase in the tentative agreement, which also features what union officials called an “industry-standard wage scale” that they believe will aid in retention.

“We are pleased that the county has listened,” Kathy Avila, a Contra Costa Regional Medical Center nurse, said in a statement. “We feel that this agreement will help us retain the experienced nurses that our patients deserve.”

The tentative agreement also includes no reductions in health care and retirement benefits, which protesters voiced concerns about to supervisors, and a continued ban on mandatory overtime.

“I am just so proud that county nurses stood together — gathering all of our courage — and we did not back down until (change) happened,” Liz Isenberg, another Contra Costa Regional Medical Center nurse, said in a statement.

“This is a moment to celebrate,” she said.

By

By

By

County seal.
County seal.

Most Popular

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. Yet HOME HEALTH CARE WORKERS, who were forced into a separate Union from the Nurses, are still paid like beginner BABYSITTERS to attend to the complex needs of the Disabled and/or Elderly Seniors.

    These WORKERS have suffered REDUCTIONS in pay over the last ten years and CUTS in care hours for their patients (in order to help governments balance their budgets).

    And now the COUNTY is threatening to REDUCE HEALTH BENEFITS for these medical workers and make medical insurance coverage even MORE EXPENSIVE for them (even though they are surrounded by diseases and illnesses).

    When is the COUNTY going to treat HOME HEALTH CARE WORKERS decently!?!

Leave a comment