MNA Legislative Update, February 22, 2013 (Page 85)

Standards of Care Act passes first committee

On Thursday, nurses packed the room for the first hearing of the Standards of Care Act, MNA’s legislation to establish standards for safe care for every Minnesota patient.

The bill was heard in the House Labor, Workplace and Regulated Industries Committee. Testifiers in favor were MNA President Linda Hamilton, Joe Howard, and MNA nurse from Essentia Miller-Dwan in Duluth and Naomi Freyholz a nurse from Sleepy Eye Medical Center. (The nurses at Sleepy Eye voted on Wednesday to join MNA. They chose to organize because of chronic unsafe staffing and retaliation against nurses who voice their concerns.) The hospital testifiers were the President of the Minnesota Hospital Association Lawrence Massa; Carolyn Wilson, President of University of Minnesota Medical Center Fairview; Sandra McCarthy, CNO for Essentia Health; Roger Lloyd, Nursing Manager at Essentia Health in Duluth; and Mary Pynn, HealthEast Vice President and Chief Nursing Quality Officer. The audience on one side of the room was filled with hospital lobbyists. On the other side of the room: a sea of red.

Video of Joe’s testimony

Video of Naomi’s testimony

Audio of the entire hearing  (approximately 1 hour, 40 minutes)

Key points from MNA’s testimony:

  • unsafe staffing leads to delayed care or mistakes, patient falls and other preventable conditions, and needless pain and suffering.
  • when nurses report unsafe staffing levels, they are told to “make do.”
  • the so-called “creative and flexible” approaches to staffing that the hospitals take include forcing nurses to work in areas outside their specialty or forcing them to work longer hours without enough sleep.
  •  safe staffing will save money by preventing readmissions within 30 days (which CMS will no longer reimburse for) and decreasing overtime costs.
  • this issue must be addressed with a statewide standard, rather than the bargaining table, because most Minnesota nurses are not represented by MNA and have no collective bargaining process.
  •  Visit the web site www.standardsofcareact.com to read more details of why advancing Standards of Care legislation is critical to patient safety in Minnesota.

Comments from hospital administrators showed their continuing lack of understanding of the reality of nurse staffing, including these:

  • hospitals are best suited to make staffing decisions, not the government, and this bill would take away nurses’ decision-making ability.
  • They say they already use creative solutions to address staffing, and as a result, Minnesota already has the best quality of care in the country.
  • our legislation would be too expensive and would lead to layoffs and increased health care costs.

During the testimony for the hospitals, the Essentia CNO testified that she has not heard a single staffing issue and there is clear communication among staff and management.

After a lot of discussion, the bill passed 9-6. See below for a list of the committee members and how they voted.

Going forward, the bill will need to go through three or four more committees in the House, and three or four in the Senate. It will be a long road, and we need to keep telling our stories at the Capitol and keep talking to other nurses in the workplace.

Can you come to the Capitol for one Lobby Squad day to talk to legislators about the dire need for Standards of Care? (We will be there every Wednesday 11:00 am-1:00 pm, or you can work with Geri Katz to find another time that works for you.) We will meet at MNA for an up-to-the-minute briefing about the bill and then carpool to the Capitol for conversations with legislators.

If you can’t make it to the Capitol (and even if you can) please use the MNA Grassroots Action Center to contact your state senator and state representative to encourage them to support the Standards of Care Act (HF588/SF471).

Take a moment to celebrate the big accomplishment yesterday. MNA nurses should feel proud of the work you have done over the last seven years. Every unsafe staffing report, every legislator meeting, every nurse meeting got us to this point. It’s going to take a lot more work to pass this bill, but this was a huge achievement for nurses and patients.

Governor’s Budget hearings coming up

Governor Dayton’s proposed tax reform plan will be heard in the House Taxes Committee on Wednesday, February 27 at 7:00 pm. MNA supports Governor Dayton’s tax proposal, which raises revenues while making the tax system more fair for working families.

Two other tax proposals MNA supports, related to raising the cigarette tax, will be heard in Senate Tax Reform Division on February 28.

Minimum Wage bill hearings next week

The House Labor, Workplace and Regulated Industries Committee will hold the first hearing on a bill increasing the minimum wage on Wednesday, February 27 at 8:15 am.

Standards of Care Act vote in Labor, Workplace and Regulated Industries

YES

  • Peter Fischer (DFL-43A, Maplewood) Sheldon Johnson (DFL-67B, St. Paul)Carolyn Laine (DFL-41B, Columbia Heights)
  • Sandra Masin (DFL-51A, Eagan)
  • Jason Metsa (DFL-6B, Virginia)
  • Michael Nelson (DFL-40A, Brooklyn Park)
  • Shannon Savick (DFL-27A, Wells)
  • Erik Simonson (DFL-7A, Duluth)
  • Mike Sundin (DFL-11A, Esko)

NO

  • Mike Benson (R-26B, Rochester)
  • Joe Hoppe (R-47B)
  • Andrea Kieffer (R-53B, Woodbury)
  • Tim O’Driscoll (R-13B, Sartell)
  • Marion O’Neill (R-29B, Buffalo)
  • Mark Uglem (R-36A, Champlin)

If your legislator is a member of the committee, please use the MNA Grassroots Action Center to contact them and let them know your opinion of their vote.

Standards of Care Act passes first committee

On Thursday, nurses packed the room for the first hearing of the Standards of Care Act, MNA’s legislation to establish standards for safe care for every Minnesota patient.

The bill was heard in the House Labor, Workplace and Regulated Industries Committee. Testifiers in favor were MNA President Linda Hamilton, Joe Howard, and MNA nurse from Essentia Miller-Dwan in Duluth and Naomi Freyholz a nurse from Sleepy Eye Medical Center. (The nurses at Sleepy Eye voted on Wednesday to join MNA. They chose to organize because of chronic unsafe staffing and retaliation against nurses who voice their concerns.) The hospital testifiers were the President of the Minnesota Hospital Association Lawrence Massa; Carolyn Wilson, President of University of Minnesota Medical Center Fairview; Sandra McCarthy, CNO for Essentia Health; Roger Lloyd, Nursing Manager at Essentia Health in Duluth; and Mary Pynn, HealthEast Vice President and Chief Nursing Quality Officer.
… Read more about: MNA Legislative Update, February 22, 2013  »

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 MNA-NNU-spot-logo-for-Blog

LAWMAKERS AGREE PATIENTS NEED STANDARDS OF CARE

Standards of Care Act passes House Committee

(St Paul) – February 21, 2013- The Standards of Care Act passed the Minnesota Labor, Workplace and Regulated Industries Committee, moving the bill that sets staffing levels for hospitals to ensure safe patient care.  The bill was introduced to the Committee by House Author, Joe Atkins (DFL-Inver Grove Heights)

Committee members heard from bedside nurses from Minneapolis, Sleepy Eye, and Duluth about the struggle to provide good care for patients when they’re understaffed.
… Read more about: Press Release-Lawmakers Agree patients need Standards of Care  »

Minnesota Representative Joe Atkins (DFL-Inver Grove Heights) and Senator Jeff Hayden (DFL-Minneapolis) stick up for nurses and counter the St Paul Pioneer Press editorial against the Standards of Care Act.

Link to article:

http://www.twincities.com/opinion/ci_22631041/taking-exception-safe-nurse-patient-staffing-saves-lives
… Read more about: Lawmakers counter PiPress editorial against Standards of Care  »

NOTES ON NURSING
… Read more about: MNA NewsScan, February 20, 2013: Sleepy Eye Nurses Join MNA  »

Sleepy Eye Nurses Vote For Union Representation with Minnesota Nurses Association24 registered and licensed practical nurses at Sleepy Eye Medical Center have the power of 20,000 additional voices at their workplace with today’s decision to join the Minnesota Nurses Association.  Leaders are confident the move will lead to better and safer care for patients of the critical access hospital located in south central Minnesota.  “With a contract behind us, we can better advocate for our patients,” said Naomi Freyholtz, RN.
Nurses were stirred to organize in part because skilled colleagues have been exiting the facility due to frustration with management practices regarding scheduling and staffing. 

photoMedia all over the state is signaling that MNA has the momentum to achieve a momentous breakthrough for patients in our state. When MNA and legislators Sen. Jeff Hayden and Rep. Joe Atkins announced the introduction of the Standards of Care Act, here’s what WCCO wrote: the staffing proposal has a strong shot.
Let’s keep the energy going, nurses. Let’s get Standards of Care in every facility, on every shift, for every patient. The following links should give you goose bumps, and we hope they inspire you to stay active in this campaign.
… Read more about: MNA Launches Standards of Care Campaign  »

 

Transcript:

There will likely be, probably layoffs of other employees, if a mandated government ratio went into effect.

And, what do you say about those, just the very issues they raise about patient safety because of the kinds of decisions they have to make?

Well hospitals obviously share the concern for patient safety. It is a top priority of hospitals to work on patient safety issues. And that is why we’ve been ranked very high on all the national rankings for hospitals. The Agency for Health Care Quality and Research ranked Minnesota hospitals and our health care delivery system here in Minnesota number one in the country.
… Read more about: MHA’s response to the Standards of Care Act  »

Lawmakers join the Minnesota Nurses Association in advocating for the Standards of Care Act that ensures enough nurses are on duty according to patient needs per unit and per shift and that hospitals will abide by nationally accepted, evidence-based standards.

 

Here’s the link to the media advisory:

http://us6.campaign-archive2.com/?u=b76817cab8adb00ed10718346&id=fea5d555da

 
… Read more about: Standards of Care Act introduced this Wednesday at the Capitol  »