Business & Tech

Nurses Striking at Alta Bates, Other Sutter Hospitals

Sutter Health won't allow strikers to return to work until Saturday

Bay City News--About 4,000 registered nurses are staging a one-day strike at eight Bay Area hospitals today to protest concessions that Sutter Health management is seeking.

California Nurses Association spokesman Charles Idelson said management is demanding 150 concessions in patient care protections and nursing standards.

In an interview at CNA offices in Oakland, where nurses were preparing picket signs, Millie Borland, a nurse at Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Oakland, said the concessions management is seeking will cost nurses $20,000 to $30,000 a year.

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Elena Ballock, who's been a nurse at Eden Medical Center in Castro Valley for 35 years, said she's concerned because she believes that Summit is also cutting back on important services for patients, such as psychiatric care and obstetrics and gynecology.

But Carolyn Kemp, a spokeswoman for Alta Bates Summit hospitals in Berkeley and Oakland, said that since contract talks began in May, "We've been trying to partner with the nurses but they want more and it's an unrealistic more."

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Kemp said Summit is asking nurses to make co-payments for their health care coverage. But, she said, nurses are highly paid, earning an average of $136,000 per year and getting a pension plan worth $84,000 per year for life once they reach age 65 with at least 22 years of experience. Nurses at Alta Bates Summit campuses have received a 22 percent salary increase over the last three years, she said.

The walkout is affecting Alta Bates campuses in Berkeley and Oakland, Mills-Peninsula hospital campuses in Burlingame and San Mateo, Eden Medical Center facilities in Castro Valley and San Leandro, Sutter Delta in Antioch and Sutter Solano in Vallejo.

Kemp said Sutter had to enter into five-day contracts with replacement nurses who will fill in for the striking nurses, as it's difficult to find nurses who will only work for one day during the holidays.

Sutter Health spokeswoman Karen Garner said the replacement nurses will be paid for five days but will only work two days, today and Friday. The striking nurses won't be allowed to come back to work until Saturday morning, she said.

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