Strike Averted at Women & Infants Hospital

After voting to authorize a strike last week, union members have reached a tentative deal with Women & Infants Hospital

Women & Infants Hospital is part of the Care New England hospital group.
Women & Infants Hospital is part of the Care New England hospital group.
Lynn Arditi
Share
Women & Infants Hospital is part of the Care New England hospital group.
Women & Infants Hospital is part of the Care New England hospital group.
Lynn Arditi
Strike Averted at Women & Infants Hospital
Copy

Women & Infants Hospital says it’s reached a tentative agreement on a new nearly three-year contract with members of the 1199 SEIU NE union.

Frontline caregivers had voted last week to authorize a strike, citing uncompetitive wages and a refusal to bargain in good faith, among other things. Union officials said the hospital’s lack of adequate pay was contributing to increasing stress among workers and was also making it difficult for the hospital to address staffing shortages.

Hospital officials say the new deal is a step in the right direction, as it includes salary increases and preserves worker pensions.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The Providence-based nonprofit and three other arts organizations won a lawsuit, with the help of the local ACLU, against the Trump administration’s campaign targeting ‘gender ideology’
Executive Director Beth Lamarre shares how NAMI RI educates communities, reduces stigma, and prepares for the October 11 NAMIWalks event at Roger Williams Park
Other states created new oversight systems. In Rhode Island, officers still dominate misconduct hearings — and promised transparency measures remain unfunded
The libraries offer a slew of free programming every week for kids and adults at their nine locations around the city. We highlight a few of these events in this monthly segment – from a haunted house to a book club highlighting African American authors
Search for new cinema chain comes as mall is about to hit the sale market
The longtime North Kingstown lawmaker and House Judiciary chair enters a Democratic primary already featuring state Rep. Jason Knight and former AG policy director Keith Hoffmann, with others eyeing a run to succeed term-limited Peter Neronha