Why Did Oregon Nurses Strike?
Reflecting national trends, striking nurses wanted to come to the bargaining table to discuss:
- Stronger patient safety standards;
- Safe nurse staffing;
- Affordable healthcare and paid leave; and
- Fair compensation packages that aid in recruitment and retention.
Virginia Smith, RN and ONA executive committee president at Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center, said in a news release that the hospital system isn’t taking patient or nurse safety seriously, citing yearslong exposure to high-risk situations and working for six months without a contract.
“Nurses have reached across the aisle in bargaining and Providence has repeatedly slapped our hand away,” Smith said. “We want to work but we need to work to be safe for our patients and our coworkers.”
A statewide hospital staffing law went into effect last September, rolling out patient limits and ratios through July 1, 2026, and providing a method for patients to make staffing complaints. As of Aug. 12, nearly 1,700 complaints had been filed, 314 were under investigation, 77 investigations had been completed, and 29 complaints were substantiated.
The Op-Ed from Providence Oregon
Jennifer Burrows, RN and Providence Oregon’s chief executive officer, said in her Portland Tribune editorial that nurses “walked away from generous offers,” which included pay increases. ONA disputes that statement.
Burrows also cited hospital payroll data that shows an average pay rate of $66.94 per hour ($125,303 annually), including “overtime, shift differentials, and other opportunities.” The double-digit raises nurses are requesting would be unsustainable, she wrote.
However, in ONA’s response, Smith wrote that overtime and shift differentials are “compensation for extended and often grueling hours” rather than guaranteed income. Smith also points to Providence’s status as a “nearly $29 billion corporation” with executive salaries upwards of $850,000 as a reason the requested salary increases could be implemented.
When it comes to nurse staffing ratios, Burrows believes the statewide staffing bill will ensure practitioners are not overworked.
Despite ONA’s involvement in the joint management-labor coalition that supported the measure, Smith wrote that nurses still report unsafe staffing levels.
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