
Striking health care workers at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center crowded the sidewalks along Mill Plain Boulevard in front of the central Vancouver hospital this morning, on the picket line before dawn.
Hundreds of health care workers represented by the Oregon Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals AFT Local 5017, AFL-CIO, lined the sidewalk from Northeast 92nd Avenue stretching for blocks under the dim streetlights. Picketers wore matching red shirts, blew whistles and held signs that read “techs are the heart of PeaceHealth.”
Commuters passing on Mill Plain honked car horns in support of the union. A few picketers stood in the median between the east and westbound lanes.
The union, which represents more than 1,300 respiratory therapists, radiology techs and maintenance workers across PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center and PeaceHealth St. John Medical Center in Longview, gave administration a 10-day notice for a strike Oct. 13, with picketing planned at both locations. This strike does not include doctors or nurses.
The union said workers will strike for five days, returning to work at 12:01 a.m. Saturday, but bargaining and negotiations are still on pause.
Michelle James, senior vice president for patient care services and chief nursing officer for PeaceHealth, said the two hospitals will continue operations during the strike and prioritize safe patient care.
All hospitals and facilities will remain open, but patients should plan extra time for appointments due to possible congestion at the Southwest Medical office.
“We’re asking people to give it a little more time if they have an appointment scheduled,” James said. “After the five-day strike, we’re going to welcome our caregivers back with open arms and we want to get back to the bargaining table.”
Shawna Ross, sonographer at PeaceHealth Southwest and union representative, took to the picket line this morning.
“Our biggest ask is safe staffing. We are tired — a lot of us are at the end of our careers,” said Ross who has worked at PeaceHealth for 28 years. “All we want to do is provide safe care for our patients and still be respected.”
On Tuesday, union members said they could lose their health insurance if the strike carries into November, which PeaceHealth spokesperson Debra Carnes said is “standard practice that applies to any caregiver (union-represented or not) who chooses not to work.”
Members of OFNHP AFT Local 5017 are striking over what they say are low wages, low staffing levels and what the union described as prolonged contract negotiations with PeaceHealth management.
PeaceHealth, based in Vancouver, is a not-for-profit Catholic health system offering care to communities in Washington, Oregon and Alaska. PeaceHealth has approximately 16,000 workers and 10 medical centers in the Northwest. PeaceHealth Southwest has 450 beds and is a Level II trauma center.
In July, PeaceHealth announced plans to close PeaceHealth Memorial Urgent Care facility, 3400 Main St., Vancouver, at the end of September.
Unionized health care workers picketed outside of Kaiser Permanente’s Cascade Park Medical Office on Oct. 4-6, part of the the largest health care strike in U.S. history.