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Nurses vote to strike again

Author
Raphael Franks,
Publish Date
Wed, 19 Jul 2023, 4:34pm
Nurses have voted to strike again, saying they’re “extremely frustrated at the lack of progress” with negotiations with employer Te Whatu Ora. Photo / Alex Burton
Nurses have voted to strike again, saying they’re “extremely frustrated at the lack of progress” with negotiations with employer Te Whatu Ora. Photo / Alex Burton

Nurses vote to strike again

Author
Raphael Franks,
Publish Date
Wed, 19 Jul 2023, 4:34pm

Nurses have voted to strike again, saying they’re “extremely frustrated at the lack of progress” in negotiations with employer Te Whatu Ora.

Members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) voted to strike today, chief executive Paul Goulter said, for 24 hours from 9am on August 9.

Te Whatu Ora has not addressed nurses’ concerns, the union said. The vote, organised on Tuesday, came just before Te Whatu Ora made a new offer.

Members will vote on the offer on August 1, and if it is successful the strike will be called off.

 “Members demanded this [strike] ballot because they are extremely frustrated at the lack of progress and slow responses from Te Whatu Ora in negotiations,” Goulter said.

Members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO)today  voted to strike.

Members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO)today voted to strike.

“[Those negotiations] have been going on since the current agreement expired back in October,” he said.

The Herald has approached Te Whatu Ora for comment.

Goulter said union members felt their concerns about unsafe working environments “faced every day in our public hospitals and worksites” haven’t been taken seriously.

 “They do not feel they are being heard,” he said.

“To date, claims in negotiations around safer staffing practices, nurse-to-patient ratios and health and safety have pretty much fallen on deaf ears, and these members have simply had enough.”

Striking nurses during their rally at Parliament, Wellington in June 2021.  Photo / Mark Mitchell

Striking nurses during their rally at Parliament, Wellington in June 2021. Photo / Mark Mitchell

He said members, including nurses, midwives, healthcare assistants and kaimahi haoura, were “always reluctant to strike” because of how it affected patients.

“But there comes a point when they decide they have to strike for the very wellbeing of those patients, whose health and everyday care is jeopardised by unsafe staffing levels that Te Whatu Ora refuses to address,” he said.

NZNO will work with Te Whatu Ora to try and provide life-preserving services at all hospitals and worksites during the strike.

The union will issue Te Whatu Ora with a strike notice next Monday.

Union members will vote in a separate ballot on whether to accept a Te Whatu Ora pay equity offer on July 24.

Raphael Franks is an Auckland-based reporter who covers breaking news. He joined the Herald as a Te Rito cadet in 2022.

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