Health & Fitness

Unionized Nurses Strike At Riverside Community Hospital

According to SEIU Local 121RN, the strike began at 7 a.m. Wednesday and will continue in intervals through Monday morning.

The picketing stems from stalled labor negotiations, which started in May, according to the union.
The picketing stems from stalled labor negotiations, which started in May, according to the union. (Shutterstock)

RIVERSIDE, CA — Unionized nurses at Riverside Community Hospital walked off the job Wednesday to call attention to working conditions, after six months of negotiations with the facility's corporate ownership have failed to produce the desired results.

According to Service Employees International Union Local 121RN, the strike began at 7 a.m. Wednesday and will continue in intervals through Monday morning.

The RCH workers' stoppage will coincide with analogous ones at Los Robles Regional Medical Center in Thousand Oaks and West Hills Hospital.

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SEIU Local 121RN represents more than 1,000 healthcare workers at RCH, but it was unclear how many would be participating in the labor action, which will generally run from 7 a.m. to noon daily over the five-day period, with curtailed hours on Thanksgiving.

"We are disappointed by SEIU 121RN leadership's decision to strike as it is absolutely unnecessary, given the serious efforts we have invested in bargaining since May. It's evident the labor union has not taken these sessions seriously and has intended to strike all along, despite our genuine attempts at finding common ground," HCA Healthcare Southern California said in a statement released Wednesday.

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"Our hospitals have taken proactive measures to provide high-quality health care for our patients and our communities throughout a strike. We are drawing on the resources of our nationwide HCA Healthcare system to ensure each hospital is fully operational. Our doors will remain open throughout any labor union activities and, importantly, there will be no closure of any services at this time."

The picketing stems from stalled labor negotiations, which started in May, according to the union.

Nurses complain that nurse-to-patient ratios are creating a "system- wide crisis" because units are understaffed, according to an SEIU statement.

"We are here to care for our patients with the same dedication and excellence as always," HCA Healthcare Southern California said in a statement.

The union said that over the last three years, California Department of Public Health officials determined there had been hundreds of staffing violations at each of the medical facilities.

"On many hospital units, patient sitters -- who carefully monitor patients and intervene to prevent falls and injuries -- are replaced by off- site virtual sitters, who watch patients on a video monitor and can only give verbal instructions, often to patients who are confused or facing emotional crisis," according to an SEIU statement. "Nurses say that this system is woefully inadequate to help patients who can inadvertently, or intentionally, harm themselves."

Other complaints included deficient security to prevent workplace violence, the prevention of union reps from entering some facilities to communicate with members and "disinformation" circulated by administrators related to the previous work stoppage in 2020.

There was no mention regarding salary and benefits hikes, though SEIU 121RN Executive Director Rosanna Mendez pointed out that "working people everywhere are demanding recognition for their sacrifice, and that sentiment is strongly felt by health care workers."