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ckaihatsu
1st June 2012, 22:55
Strike at UIC Medical Center

By Joe Iosbaker

Chicago, IL- Cathleen Jensen is an occupational therapist at the University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center and she is on strike.

There are a total of 500 of her co-workers who are part of the Professional Unit of civil service workers. They went on strike May 30 in response to management refusing to give them wage equity in negotiations for their first contract. They joined the Service Employee International Union (SEIU) Local 73 almost two years ago and have been in negotiations with management for 14 months.

Diana Thomas, Communications Services Specialist in telecommunications, told what she found when she got to the bargaining table as part of the negotiating committee. We saw that the so called academic professional employees were given raises far above ours. Thomas is a civil service employee. We demanded the same wages, and they offered us a little this year and no commitment for the next two years.

Jensen said, Management is hiring new graduates out of school, giving them a little more than last year, but refusing to give many of us raises for six years. Jensen is proud to work at a hospital where she cares for a community of patients that is underserved. Thats why I have stayed here, she explained.

In recent years, top administrators at the University of Illinois at Chicago received large salary increases, causing controversy in the public eye. This hasnt caused the Board of Trustees to reverse the increases for the top 1%, said Phil Martini, vice president of the local.

The medical center has been a going concern, with patient visits having increased by 300,000 a year in the past 20 years. These workers joined Local 73 - which already represented 3000 workers at UIC and which has a proven history of winning good contracts - in 2010, as the service, clerical and technical workers were preparing to strike. In the union movement, it is commonly held that new workers of an employer cant be unionized when workers under existing contracts are preparing to strike.

The strikers marched on the Board of Trustees meeting in the pouring rain on the second day of the strike. The strike will continue until 6:00 p.m. June 1.

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ckaihatsu
1st June 2012, 22:56
http://www.progressillinois.com/quick-hits/content/2012/05/31/uic-medical-center-workers-continue-striking-fair-wages?utm_source=Copy+of+PI+Extra+5.31.12&utm_campaign=PI+email+5.31.12&utm_medium=email


Quick Hit

Steven Ross Johnson Thursday May 31st, 2012, 4:27pm


UIC Medical Center Workers Continue Striking For Fair Wages


Day two in a three-day strike being held by employees at the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago continued Thursday as close to 200 demonstrators demanding a new contract held a rally outside the building where a meeting of the institutions Board of Trustees was taking place.



Around 480 members of the Service Employees International Union Local 73 at UIC began a three-day strike Wednesday.

Union members participating in the protest include Medical Technologists, IT Specialists, social workers and employees with the hospitals Division of Specialized Care for Children, as well as other support staff. In all, the hospital has a workforce of around 3,200.

As SEIU spokesman Adam Rosen explained, striking members include anyone at the hospital that affects medicine, who is not a doctor or a nurse, although some affected do include a number of nurses not belonging to the Illinois Nurses Association, of which around 90 percent of nurses employed at the hospital are members.

At the heart of the disagreement, according to Rosen, has been the hospitals refusal thus far to increase the rate of pay to levels comparable to similar types of medical institutions for some 36 different jobs the union represents at UIC.

Right now, most of these professionals on strike havent received a wage increase in six or seven years - if not longer, Rosen said. The majority of them are very much underpaid compared to the same types of job classifications at other university hospitals throughout the state.

Talks between the two sides over a new contract have been ongoing for about 14 months, with negotiations breaking down over a failure to come to an agreement over wage increases.

Rosen said attempts at a compromise failed once again earlier this week when the hospital failed to provide a counter offer to the unions latest proposal. He said only three out of the 36 positions represented by SEIU* were offered pay raises at the level that union members would deem acceptable, while others were presented with a retroactive increase of 3 percent.

Basically, it was a way to buy off some and tell off the rest, Rosen said. We heard that proposal twice and the bargaining committee said 'no'. Its equity for all of us, not just some of us.

The strike is scheduled to end Friday evening.

UIC spokesman Mark Rosati said over the past 14 months, there have been 33 negotiating sessions with the union, the last seven of which with a federal mediator. He added that they have been able to reach agreements on a number of topics, but it has been the economic issues that have been the largest sticking point.

Were hoping to get to the table soon to come reach an agreement, Rosati said. We want an agreement thats fair to our employees, but at the same time financially responsible for the university and those it serves.

* The SEIU Illinois Council sponsors this web site.

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Prometeo liberado
1st June 2012, 23:07
The next logical step of intransigence on the part of Management is a move to claim a "wild cat" strike status and begin either decertification or jail time for union leaders. Barring a media shift or city wide show of force in its portrayal of this issue of course.