‘Common Sense’ Collides With NJ Hospitals’ Lust for Profit
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
By Bob Hennelly
On May 11, the day President Joe Biden declared an end to the COVID emergency, hundreds of nurses were in Trenton demanding enactment of nurse-to-patient staffing ratios as was done in California in 2004 which studies have documented greatly improved patient outcomes, workplace safety, infection control and nurse retention.
‘Our Residents Deserve Better…Nursing Home Workers to Strike in Buffalo Suburbs
By Steve Wishnia
Fed up with chronic conditions of low pay, understaffing, and disrepair, workers at a for-profit nursing home in the Buffalo suburbs will go on strike for 24 hours on Wednesday, May 17.
LISTEN: You’re Not Supposed to Notice the Caring Economy is on Life Support…
By Bob Hennelly
The corporate news media has been working overtime to drum up fear and anxiety in the population alternating between their fixation on the border and the supposed great perils of undocumented immigration — and breathless stories about the completely manufactured beltway crisis over the impending debt ceiling. They want us to be fearful and in the insecure mindset where we see a world of scarcity.
LISTEN: It’s Time to ‘Move the Money’
Work-Bites
Municipal retirees being stripped of the Medicare benefits they were promised after decades of service; home care attendants forced to work 24-hour shifts at half the pay; public sector nurses grappling with chronically low wages and increasingly untenable patient ratios — the list of economic injustices heaped on working people goes on and on. And why? A supposed lack of money.
NYC Comptroller Gets Aetna Contract; Retirees Fighting to Save Traditional Medicare Call BS on City Council Inaction
By Joe Maniscalco
Stripping New York City municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare benefits and pushing them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage program will not deliver the $600 million savings Mayor Eric Adams’ administration claims it will.
NYC Public Hospitals Are Bleeding Out…
By Steve Wishnia
“We don’t want pizza parties. We want pay raises so we can stop the hemorrhaging of staff,” Sonia Lawrence, the New York State Nurses Association’s director for New York City Health + Hospitals facilities, told several hundred nurses and supporters gathered in Foley Square May 10.
LISTEN: Nurses Rally for Safe Staffing/Universal Healthcare NOW!
By Bob Hennelly
On Thursday, May 11 President Biden will end the COVID public health emergency which was declared three years ago by then President Trump. It has been widely reported that as many as 15 million Americans will lose their health insurance as the states reevaluate their Medicaid status now that the pandemic is declared over.
Mission NOT Accomplished, Joe… Healthcare is Code Blue!
By Bob Hennelly
Later this week, President Joe Biden is expected to declare the nation’s COVID pandemic emergency over, even as the nation’s healthcare system is in a deepening access and affordability crisis Washington is in active denial because the medical industrial complex is paying them to look the other way.
LISTEN: ‘It’s Incredible’ - Union Leaders have ‘Voted Overwhelmingly Against their Members’ Interests’
Work-Bites.com
On this episode of the Iron Bill Hohlfeld show labor writer Robert Ovetz talks about the “Stockholm Syndrome” impacting too many labor leaders today where they start to “think about the issues from the perspective of the boss” — and how that sad reality correlates to the fight retired trade unionists in New York City are having trying to save their traditional Medicare benefits from being stripped and privatized.
Mayday! Mayday! Who is Protecting NYC’s Most Vulnerable Workers and Retirees?!?
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams [D-28th District] is crying foul this week after angry calls for her resignation erupted at a May Day rally outside City Hall on Monday in support of exploited home care attendants across the five boroughs.
LISTEN: NYC Retirees Fighting to Save Medicare Blast City Council Do-nothings
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, Marianne Pizzitola, head of the NYC Organization of Public Service Retirees and Michelle Keller, head of the NYC Coalition of Labor Union Women connect the legacy of May Day to the ongoing battle to preserve the traditional Medicare benefits municipal retirees were promised as active duty workers.
‘We Have to Push Back’: Baristas Call out Starbucks for Stonewalling Contract Talks
By Steve Wishnia
“Why do you all spend so much money on union-busting?” Laura Rosario, a barista at a Starbucks in Montclair, N.J., demanded May 1, as a group of 15 to 20 Starbucks Workers United members filled the entrance room at the company’s New York regional office near Penn Station.
Dying to Make a Living: NYC’s Immigrant Workers Demand Dignity and Respect
By Joe Maniscalco
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration recorded the deaths of 20 New York City construction workers in 2015 — the same year a 22-year-old Ecuadorian immigrant named Carlos Moncayo was crushed to death helping to erect what is now Restoration Hardware and the RH Rooftop Restaurant on 9th Avenue in NYC’s Meatpacking District.
And the Bagpipers Played On…NYC Workers Reflect on Scandalous Death Toll
By Steve Wishnia
On the chilly gray afternoon of Apr. 28, mourners laid red roses and white carnations on a table in Manhattan’s Foley Square, reading the names of workers who died on the job in New York City in the past year.
Workers Memorial Day ‘23: Black & Latino Deaths are Soaring; Uncle Sam is Spending $3.99 on Job Safety…
By Bob Hennelly
Despite decades of progress in worker safety since the creation of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration in 1970, there’s troubling evidence of deadly backsliding particularly for the nation’s Black and Latino workers, according to a comprehensive analysis from the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest labor federation.
A ‘Proper Tribute’ to Municipal Workers Who Gave All in NJ
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
They came from all over New Jersey and reflected the state’s diversity yet all of them shared a desire to protect the public’s safety. As a consequence, they paid the ultimate price for keeping that commitment in the brutal onslaught that was COVID which hit an unprepared nation hard.
Inside the ‘Grotesque Legal Fiction’ Enslaving Home-Care Workers
By Steve Wishnia
In 1960, when the federal minimum wage was $1 an hour and did not cover workers in nursing homes or construction, the New York State Department of Labor established a regulation that home health-care attendants working 24-hour shifts should only get paid for 13 hours, because they have the other 11 hours off for eating, sleeping, and breaks
LISTEN: ‘Healing Us’ From Predatory Healthcare
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we will get an update on the labor situation at Rutgers University from the leadership of the Rutgers Adjunct Faculty Union, President Amy Higer and Vice President Bryan Sacks. In the second half of the show, we will visit with documentary filmmaker Kenny Ballentine, whose latest project “Healing Us” captures the devastating consequences on our families from our nation’s for-profit predatory healthcare system.
WATCH: The Fed Won’t Be Happy Until You’re Unemployed
Work-Bites.com
On this “Your Labor Minute” episode, host Mark Harrison breaks down why the friendly folks at the Federal Reserve want to see more working people unemployed!
Wall Street Between You and Your Doctor: Former Goldman Sachs Exec Anointed Aetna Boss
By Bob Hennelly
CVS Health has named Brian Kane as the Executive Vice President and President of Aetna, effective September 1. He will report to CVS Health President and CEO Karen S. Lynch. Last month, New York City Mayor Eric Adams signed a contract with Aetna as part of the administration’s campaign to strip 250,000 municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare benefits and push them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage program.