Posted on Friday, March
11, 2010
Judge Verifies NUHW Landslide Vote at Doctors
Medical Center
By National Union of Healthcare Workers
SEIU kept workers from bargaining a contract
for ten months by
crying unfair; judge rules SEIU, not NUHW,
had unfair advantage
San Pablo, Calif.—Almost a year after workers
at Doctors Medical Center in San Pablo voted 158-to-24 to quit
SEIU and join the National Union of Healthcare Workers, an
independent judge has determined that California's labor board
should certify the landslide vote and make the switch official.
Workers at the hospital have been prevented from bargaining
a contract since last May because of the reckless actions of
SEIU officials, who filed fraudulent objections to the election
that have now been rejected.
While SEIU could appeal the judge's decision, Richmond Mayor
Gayle McLaughlin called on SEIU to accept the ruling and stand
aside. [emphasis added]
"SEIU's interference has left caregivers in our community
without a voice for nearly a year," McLaughlin said. "It's
time for SEIU to accept workers' choice and stop standing in
their way." [emphasis added]
Administrative Law Judge Donn Ginoza rejected SEIU's claims
that the election was unfair, rejecting the testimony of SEIU's
top-ranking witness as "not very persuasive" and finding that "to
the extent that there was differential access, SEIU-UHW had
the advantage." ( Read the decision at http://bit.ly/dmc-perb )
Workers at Doctors were the first SEIU members to vote on
whether to join NUHW—and SEIU officials wanted to make an example
of them. At the same time SEIU was using false claims to delay
NUHW from being certified, SEIU was sending mailings to workers
at other hospitals, claiming that NUHW had not yet won the
contract and that workers were losing at Doctors—even though
SEIU was still the recognized union.
Over the last year, thousands of other healthcare workers
across California have joined NUHW and had their elections
certified, while SEIU continued to interfere at Doctors. This
decision by the labor board could bring closure to the very
first election and allow workers to move forward and win with
NUHW.
"We won our election by such a huge margin because workers
here want democracy and a real voice at work," said Duka Ristic,
an ultrasonographer at the hospital for nine years. "We're
glad the labor board has finally respected our decision, and
we hope SEIU will too."
The National Union of Healthcare Workers is California's fastest-growing
union, representing caregivers in every job classification.
More than 100,000 workers in hospitals, nursing homes, and
Kaiser Permanente facilities have petitioned for elections
to join NUHW and win a strong, democratic voice at work. http://www.nuhw.org
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