Butler Hospital and Striking Union Reach a ‘Tentative Agreement’

If approved, the deal would end a three-month strike at the psychiatric hospital that has forced the hospital to close nearly 100 beds

Health care workers strike in the rain.
About 800 unionized nurses, mental health workers and other staff at Butler Hospital in Providence on day one of their strike May 15, 2025.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
Share
Health care workers strike in the rain.
About 800 unionized nurses, mental health workers and other staff at Butler Hospital in Providence on day one of their strike May 15, 2025.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
Butler Hospital and Striking Union Reach a ‘Tentative Agreement’
Copy

Butler Hospital and the union representing more than 700 nurses, mental health workers, dietary and maintenance staff announced Monday that they have reached a tentative agreement to end the three-month-long strike.

“On behalf of both Butler Hospital and members of the bargaining committee representing all job classifications of the hospital, we are pleased to share that a tentative agreement has been reached,’’ reads a joint statement posted on the hospital’s website. “More details will be forthcoming in the coming days.”

The statement was attributed to Butler Hospital’s president and chief operating officer, Mary E. Marran, and Jesse Martin, executive vice president of SEIU1199NE, a hospital spokeswoman said in an email.

Union members are scheduled to vote on the agreement Monday, a union spokesperson confirmed.

The announcement comes a week after it appeared that hopes of a settlement anytime soon had evaporated.

Union leaders said at a news conference last week that they’d agreed to raise members’ insurance premiums by $110 a month. In return, union leaders said, they were asking the hospital for another $1.2 million in wages over four years – about $300,000 a year. The additional wages, they said, were aimed at raising the wages of their lowest-paid staff.

But after a long night of negotiations with a federal mediator, the talks ended without a deal. And Butler Hospital announced that due to short-staffing it was shutting down 29 beds in its addiction treatment unit. That’s in addition to the 70 beds that it had previously closed. The 197-bed hospital is now operating at about half of its capacity.

The hospital has also spent “millions” of dollars to hire temporary replacement staff from out of state, according to Marran.

Leaders of SEIU1199 said earlier this month that management’s July 11 “last, best and final offer” failed to raise the wages of the union’s lowest-paid members, including maintenance workers and dietary staff, who earn less than $20 an hour.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

The University of Rhode Island will relocate home games to the new 10,500-seat stadium while Meade Stadium undergoes an 18-month overhaul, aiming to boost the fan experience and expand its audience
As student numbers decline and co-op teams expand, RI Interscholastic League director Mike Lunney urges schools to refocus on why sports were created — to keep kids engaged, build character, and prepare them for life beyond the field
New Census data show 32,549 children lived in poverty in 2024 — a jump of more than 20% from the year before — as advocates urge state action on health care, housing, and food security
In Rhode Island, the suicide and crisis hotline call center received over 1,500 calls in July. That’s a more than 200% increase from when 988 first launched

Caucus analysis claims the state’s housing finance agency devotes outsized resources to administrative costs compared with peers in Massachusetts and other New England states; RIHousing CEO pushes back, calling the criticism political and highlighting billions invested in homes