Raises, improved leave included in Whidbey hospital, nurses contract; vote coming

Whidbey General Hospital and the nurses’s union reached a tentative contract agreement this week, potentially ending nearly a year of negotiations.

Whidbey General Hospital and the nurses’s union reached a tentative contract agreement this week, potentially ending nearly a year of negotiations.

In a contract summary released by the union, nurses would receive a 2 percent pay bump in April and another .5 percent in October. They’d receive a 2.5 percent increase each of the following two years. The contract includes pay increases in other situations, such as a 25-cent per hour bump in standby pay.

The bargaining team also negotiated agreements on workplace issues, including new language stating that nurses who take family and medical leave can do so over a 12-month period — they don’t have to take their time all at once. Nurses who the hospital wishes to suspend or discharge must be given the opportunity to have a meeting beforehand to state their case with a union representative present and the hospital has to present them with the charges in writing.

The hospital also agreed in the proposed contract that nurses will not automatically be disciplined for failing a drug test if there is no evidence they were impaired on the job. Off duty recreational marijuana use also isn’t grounds for drug testing, since that drug is legal in Washington.

The union summary also includes issues floated by the hospital administration that the union bargaining team said they blocked. One of those was a proposal that nurses not be able to take a 15-minute uninterrupted rest break. Another was a proposal that management could monitor union meetings.

A majority of nurses still have to approve the agreement, said Ruth Schubert, a spokeswoman for the Washington State Nurses Association. The contract would expire in April 2019.

“We are very happy with this contract and the bargaining team is recommending a ‘yes’ vote,” she said. “The fact that we were able to fight off some really negative proposals from Whidbey General management is significant. We were able to fight the negative proposals off because the nurses stuck together and because of the wonderful support we got from the community.”

Under the terms of the agreement, the hospital can’t comment until the agreement is ratified, said hospital spokesman Keith Mack.

If the contract is approved, nurses who signed it will get a bonus up to $1,500, depending on their work status and when they were hired.

A full copy of the statement is available online at www.wsna.org.