News & Commentary March 20, 2023
https://onlabor.org/march-20-2023/
By Elyse Weissberger
In todays News and Commentary, residents and fellows at Mass General Brigham hospitals prepare to unionize, divisions in the New York Times NewsGuild union deepens as contract negotiations remain ongoing, the six-month Pittsburgh Post-Gazette strike turned violent on Saturday, and Los Angeles schools prepare to close this week as workers plan to strike.
Residents and fellows at several Mass General Brigham hospitals are organizing to join the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR), a Service Employees International Union (SEIU) affiliate. The unionization effort is geared towards doctors in their post-medical school training period, which consists of three to seven years of residency and another possible one to three years in a fellowship. These doctors often work 80-hour weeks and report being pressured to underreport hours. MGB argues that their residents earn higher than average salaries, even when compared to expensive cities such as New York and San Francisco. Union organizers contend that these salary figures are misleading as they do not compare benefits such as retirement matching. Residents and fellows depend on letters of recommendation and network connections from hospital administration, stalling unionization efforts for years. Department chairs at Mass. General and Brigham and Womens sent an open letter calling for the residents and fellows to move beyond the unionization effort and focus their attention on working together. Organizers plan to file paperwork and hold an election before June. If successful, CIR would become one of the largest unions representing medical residents and fellows in the country.
The two-year deadlock between the New York Times and the NYT NewsGuild union intensified last week. A.G. Sulzberger, the Times publisher, communicated with the unions bargaining group for the first time, conveying dismay at the stalemated negotiation process and suggesting that the union is refusing to negotiate in person in small groups. The union disputes this claim. Within the Guild, there exist several divisions regarding the role and strategy of the union. The fractures in the union deepened in the wake of the Guilds response to recent New York Times transgender coverage. After staff and contributors penned an open letter to The Times condemning its excessive attention to the debate surrounding transgender childrens access to gender affirming care, the Guild defended these employees rights to engage in protected activity to address workplace conditions. Some union members expressed disappointment in the unions response, claiming it undermined journalistic integrity by encouraging alignment with advocacy groups. Some members have expressed interest in working with a third party mediator as suggested by management. The union held a one-day strike in December, and many members would like to vote to authorize another strike.
FULL story at link above.