Nurses unite
Nurses at Austin's Ascension Seton hospital vote to unionize
Nurses at Ascension Seton Medical Center (ASMC) in Central Austin have taken the first big step toward unionizing.
Nurses at the 391-bed medical center overwhelmingly voted in favor of joining the National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United (NNOC/NNU), the country’s largest labor union for nurses. Seventy-two percent of the nurses who participated in the vote agreed to join NNOC/NNU.
According to a union news release, ASMC's 800 nurses will join more than 2,500 other Texas members of NNOC/NNU in Brownsville, Corpus Christi, and El Paso.
For the Ascension Seton nurses, the next step will be hammering out a labor contract with the hospital administrators.
Nurses at the hospital say they wanted to unionize to, among other things, help overcome staffing shortages, gain better pay, and improve patient care.
“During the pandemic, we saw lots of staff leave our hospital because of the worsening conditions,” Matthew Clark, a registered nurse in the hospital’s intensive care unit, says in the news release. “Ascension has more than enough money to retain nurses and provide better conditions. We are excited to use our collective voice to advocate for our patients by fighting for safer staffing and better working conditions.”
Owned by Catholic-rooted Ascension, ASMC is one of the largest nonprofit healthcare systems in the U.S., reporting a net income of $5.7 billion for its 2021 budget year.
In a statement shared with CultureMap, St. Louis-based Ascension offers this response to the union vote:
“Consistent with the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, we respect our nurses’ right to organize themselves through union representation. We are united in our commitment to care for our community and those that we are privileged to serve.”
Taylor Critedon, a registered nurse in Ascension Seton’s intensive care unit, hopes more nurses in Austin join the labor movement.
Geovana Hill, a registered nurse in Ascension Seton’s renal unit, said in the news release, "This victory is just the beginning.”