This Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019, scores of Highline Medical Center nurses and caregivers will hold a ‘Rally and Informational Picket for Quality Healthcare’ about what they consider to be “severe understaffing, patient care concerns and proposed cuts to their health benefits.”

Highline staff say that executives at CHI Franciscan – the large corporate owner of Highline – are “prioritizing profits over the needs of patients.”

“Problems have grown so grave at Highline that 327 nurses and caregivers have left the hospital since 2016.”

Here’s more info from the SEIU Healthcare 1199NW union:

“I’ve been a nurse at Highline for 35 years – half my life – and I’ve watched it change from an independent community hospital to part of a major corporation which is only focused on acquisition and promotion,” said Marghee Baldridge, an emergency department registered nurse who holds a master’s degree in nursing. “I went into nursing because I have a deep commitment to helping people. But the staffing levels are unsafe at Highline, and it’s very hard to give patients the care they deserve. In the emergency department I’m often responsible for severely ill patients who require multiple time sensitive and complex interventions and there aren’t enough supportive services. It’s gotten so bad, we now have a revolving door because staff people are overwhelmed and feel they cannot provide safe care. When we ask for better staffing levels, executives say we have to meet our ‘productivity grids’ and it seems like they’re more concerned about profits than the safety and well-being of our patients. Meanwhile, CHI-Franciscan has ads running on TV during sports events and award shows – I wonder how much all that advertising costs?”

Approximately 550 registered nurses, certified nursing assistants, lab assistants, sterile processing techs, unit secretaries, environmental services workers, dietary aides and others have been trying to negotiate a fair union contract with urgent solutions since June. Rather than listening to their concerns, executives have refused to bargain in good faith and have instead committed unfair labor practices by eliminating nearly all the doctors in the workers’ health plan to try to force them into a worse corporate plan. Nurses and caregivers say it is a sad irony that executives are trying to cut healthcare for healthcare workers, which would be especially hard on lower-wage employees with children under their insurance.

Highline workers’ contract proposals aim to protect patients and caregivers by: increasing staffing levels; maintaining workers’ current, affordable healthcare plan; expanding training and continuing education opportunities; preserving retirement benefits; implementing joint labor-management processes to guard against racial injustice and discrimination in the workplace; and raising wages to meet the standard for other area hospitals in order to recruit and retain qualified staff.

“The staffing’s so bad at Highline, we feel like the wheels are coming off,” said Jenny Carter, a lead sterile processing tech who has worked at the hospital for 28 years. “In my area of sterile processing, we usually only have one person on duty per shift, which creates a bottleneck. We have to wash all the surgical instruments, then assemble them for surgeries, and there’s just not enough staff to get all the work done. Making matters worse, management’s proposed healthcare cuts are really going to hurt, especially co-workers who have children under their insurance. All these problems have created a mass exodus, with hundreds of workers leaving in recent years.”

In addition to the rally and informational picket, workers are raising awareness amongst elected officials and the public through other means, including: a mobile billboard which will be driving through major intersections in the Burien area and circling CHI Franciscan corporate headquarters in Tacoma; extensive social media posts using the hashtag #ProtectHighlinePatients; a website at ProtectHighlinePatients.org which will allow community members to directly contact executives; leafleting to patients and the public; and distributing yard and window signs to neighbors.

CHI Franciscan is very financially healthy with $1.4 billion in revenue in 2018, and certainly has more than enough resources to improve staffing levels, protect patient safety and raise job standards. Recently, Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) merged with Dignity Health to form CommonSpirit Health, the largest non-profit health system in the country by revenue, with over 700 facilities throughout 21 states. Highline workers want to hold corporate executives in distant boardrooms accountable and ensure they are investing in safe, quality healthcare and good jobs for the local community.

WHO: Highline nurses, caregivers, elected leaders and community supporters

WHAT: Rally and Informational Picket for Quality Healthcare

WHEN: Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019:

      • 3:30 p.m.: Informational picket
      • 5 p.m.: Rally with community supporters

WHERE: Highline Medical Center, 16251 Sylvester Rd SW, Burien, WA 98166:

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