Exclusive: Deep Pocketed Hospital Chain Vs. Steelworkers Union Nurses
Who Do You Trust More?
By Bob Hennelly
By Friday, all of the striking nurses at New Brunswick, New Jersey’s Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital will lose their employer healthcare coverage. No new talks are scheduled.
‘It’s Really a Betrayal’: NYC Mayor Touts Civil Service Jobs While Retirees Are Left on the Sidewalk…
By Joe Maniscalco
Retired NYPD Lieutenant Jack LaTorre, 68, rode his bike over from Bay Ridge to Sunset Park Monday afternoon, hoping to ask New York City Mayor Eric Adams why he insists on trying to strip municipal retirees like him of their traditional Medicare benefits and push them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan.
NYC Union Leaders, Retirees Call B.S. on MLC Heads Still Pushing Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
A few weeks after losing another case in court, the heads of New York City’s Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] now want City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams to believe efforts to stop them from privatizing retiree health care hurts collective bargaining rights. But how’s that work? No one — including members of the MLC — appears to know.
Welcome to NYC Mayor Eric Adams’ Shadow Workforce and Bloomberg 2.0
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adam’s awarding of a $432 million dollar no-bid contract to handle the city’s influx of undocumented migrants last spring to DocGo, a for-profit medical services company, is just the latest example of municipal government outsourcing its response to a crisis — even as it cuts or leaves vacant tens thousands of civil service jobs.
LISTEN: NJ Nurses Press Strike; Radioactive Water in the Hudson River!
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we revisit the United Steelworkers Nurses Local 4-200 strike against the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ as it enters its third week. The union is pressing its demands for an accountability mechanism for staff to patient ratios. Local 4-200 Union President Judy Danella and Debbie White, RN, president HPAE, New Jersey largest nurses’ union, talk about legislation pending in Trenton which would create a state standard for nurse staffing that would put patients ahead of hospital profits.
Why Are School Therapists in NYC Revoting on a ‘Nothing’ Contract?
By Steve Wishnia
Almost 3,000 occupational and physical therapists [OT/PT] in New York City public schools are in the process of revoting on a contract they rejected by a 2–1 margin last month.
Profits over People at NJ Hospital
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
As the nurses’ strike at New Brunswick’s Robert Wood Johnson University entered its second week, sources say the major sticking point is what sort of enforcement mechanism can be relied on to ensure the hospital maintains whatever levels of staffing that it commits to.
‘Christmas Gift in August’: Retirees Fighting Medicare Privatization Cheer Judge’s Latest Ruling
By Joe Maniscalco
“Yaaaay!”
New York City retiree Roberta Gonzalez reacted with total glee today after learning municipal workers fighting to retain their traditional Medicare health insurance coverage have won yet another big victory in court.
Community Backs NJ Nurses in Fight for Safe Staffing
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
A few days into the nurses’ strike at New Brunswick’s Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick and the outpouring of community support expressed for the nurses in the cacophony of car and truck horns echoes for blocks away.
Retirees Cheer As NYC Backs Off On Sept. 1 Medicare Advantage Deadline
By Bob Hennelly
New York City’s 250,000 municipal retirees recently got a form letter from the Office of Labor Relations announcing Mayor Eric Adams’ administration is no longer abiding by its September 1 deadline for the implementation of its Aetna Medicare Advantage Plan, which the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees [NYCOPSR] has been successfully fighting in court.
NYC H+H Nurses Win Big Raise in Ongoing Fight for Pay Parity
By Steve Wishnia
Nurses at New York City public hospitals and other city-run health facilities have won a contract that will immediately raise their salaries by more than $16,000, the New York State Nurses Association announced July 31.
‘She Wasted Away Before My Very Eyes’: Nursing Home Vultures Fight Safe Staffing Rules
By Steve Wishnia
In February 2022, President Joseph Biden directed the Department of Health and Human Services to develop minimum staffing standards for nursing homes, to remedy the most chronic problem workers and patient advocates have with the quality of care. The federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has not yet released its proposed regulations, which were expected this spring — but the nursing-home industry is already opposing them.
NYC Retirees: ‘Lip Service is Not Enough - We Want Action, and We Want it Now!’
By Joe Maniscalco
Ninety-year-old New York City municipal retiree Evie Jones Rich stood on the pavement outside the Manhattan offices of U.S. Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand in 90-plus degree heat on Friday afternoon, and spoke for nearly six minutes straight about the need to save Medicare from increasing privatization.
Somebody Promised NYC Paramedics and EMTs Pay Parity…
By Joe Maniscalco
Unbeknownst to most New Yorkers, the next time they call for help, the EMTs and Paramedics showing up to their rescue might’ve just spent a sleepless night in their cars wondering how they’re gonna cover an unexpected bill.
Adams Administration is ‘Very Proud’ of the Way NYC Responded to the Worst Air on the Planet
By Bob Hennelly
Representatives of Mayor Eric Adams’ administration told a New York City Council panel investigating its response to last month’s hazardous air days created by 400 wildfires in Canada, that it was “very proud of the city’s response within the constraints of the forecasting and information” it had at the time.
NYC Retirees Tell Council Members ‘It’s Time to Get Off the Fence’
By Joe Maniscalco
Parks Dept. retiree Michael Sirotta spent nearly a quarter century building up a free arts program for New York City kids. It used to be located on Staten Island. Famous Alumi of the now defunct program include recording artist and actor Ingrid Michaelson who joined the program when she was nine.
Why Did Newark Fighters Acabou and Brooks Die? Port Blaze ‘Under Investigation’
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
Six days after the line of duty deaths of Newark firefighters Augusto Acabou, 45, and Wayne Brooks Jr., 49, the fire aboard the Grande Costa D’Avorio docked in Port Newark is finally out but basic questions about the response continue to proliferate and officials are deflecting with the standard “It’s under investigation.”
Here’s How We Get Rid of the Taylor Law…
By Robert Ovetz
Courtesy of The Chief
At a recent worker organizing conference I heard a talk by a PSC-CUNY member who called for repealing the Taylor Law. During the break, while we talked about how to do that, they dismissed using “illegal” strikes. The reason was, they said, PSC would be unable to do one-on-one meetings with all the faculty to collect their dues once automatic dues deduction is suspended as punishment for striking.
Questions Swirl Around NJ Port Blaze That Killed Two Firefighters
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ.com
Forty-eight hours after fire first broke out on the massive Grande Costa D’Avorio vehicle carrier ship docked in Port Newark, firefighters were still trying to extinguish the blaze that claimed the lives of two beloved Newark firefighters, Augusto Acabou, 45, and Wayne Brooks Jr., 49.
Officials say the fire could continue to burn into the weekend.
Judge Blocks NYC’s Medicare Advantage Deadline!
By Steve Wishnia
State Supreme Court Judge Lyle E. Frank has blocked the city from switching its retired employees’ health coverage to Medicare Advantage. A preliminary injunction issued this morning scotches its Monday deadline for retirees who want to keep traditional Medicare to opt out of the for-profit Aetna Medicare Advantage plan.