Nurses reached tentative contracts with 15 Twin Cities and Duluth area hospitals, avoiding strikes amid an increase in respiratory diseases and patients.
Negotiators in marathon sessions Monday and early Tuesday closed a gap in wage demands, agreeing to 18% raises over three years for nurses in the Twin Cities at Allina Health, Children's Minnesota, M Health Fairview, North Memorial Health and HealthPartners' Methodist Hospital. Tentative contracts for Essentia Health and St. Luke's nurses in Duluth offer 17% raises and other bonuses.
"For years, hospital executives have been pushing nurses out of the profession by understaffing our units and under-valuing our nurses," said Mary Turner, president of the Minnesota Nurses Association (MNA) and an intensive care nurse at North Memorial Health. "This tentative agreement will help to keep nurses at the bedside."
The deals came five days after the union notified 16 hospitals of strikes that would start Dec. 11 and last at most locations until Dec. 31. Months of previous negotiations had failed to produce compromises on raises and solutions to workplace violence and understaffing. The breakdown already prompted some 15,000 nurses to strike for three days in September.
Allina Health alone spent $23 million extra to keep hospitals open during the September strike. A 20-day strike in December would have cost hundreds of millions of dollars collectively for the health systems, and intensified pressure on hospitals that already are full with patients battling RSV, influenza and COVID-19.
"We are thankful to be able to return our full attention to caring for the community at this time of increased illness and demand," said a statement from Allina, which reached tentative contracts for nurses at Abbott Northwestern, Mercy and United hospitals.
While nurses negotiate individually with their health systems every three years, the concurrent talks often produce multiple agreements at once. A deal with St. Luke's nurses was announced late Monday night and others followed.
The last agreement came Tuesday with nurses at M Health Fairview's St. John's Hospital in Maplewood, which has encountered extreme overcrowding in its emergency department this fall. The deal offered a unique approach to addressing a statewide rise in hospital violence: a pilot study of panic buttons for nurses in the ER and another unit.