A 37-day strike at five Allina Health hospitals ended Tuesday night, but nurses left the picket lines with concerns about the contract they must approve before returning to work.
In huddles during the final day of picketing and on social media, nurses debated the offer their negotiators reached during a 17-hour bargaining session arranged by Gov. Mark Dayton at his official residence.
"Sounds like a cave. Don't do it," said nurse Deanna Pulver on the Minnesota Nurses Association Facebook page. "What was the purpose of the past 6 weeks then?"
Since May, the nurses have rejected three contracts over Allina's demand to replace their low-deductible union health plans with Allina's corporate plans. The first no vote resulted in a one-week strike in June and the second prompted the open-ended strike that started on Labor Day.
But around 4:30 a.m. Tuesday, union leaders emerged from the governor's residence with the first proposal they could recommend to the rank-and-file. While it still phases out the union health plans by 2019, it guarantees that the benefits of Allina's most popular plan would remain unchanged through 2021.
"We started with nothing in the beginning of this whole negotiating process," said Angela Becchetti, a nurse at Abbott Northwestern Hospital and a member of the union negotiating team, "and now we're [promised stable benefits] through the end of 2021."
Prior proposals offered the nurses $500 cash bonuses, she added, but the latest proposal offered up to $2,500 in tax-favored payments to nurses' health reimbursement or health savings accounts over the next five years.
Voting is scheduled Thursday for more than 4,000 nurses from five Allina hospitals: United in St. Paul, Mercy in Coon Rapids, Unity in Fridley, and Abbott and the Phillips Eye Institute in Minneapolis.