After many months of difficult negotiations, your bargaining committee members are pleased to announce that they have concluded a new, province-wide Nursing Collective Agreement.
This was a historic round of bargaining that saw all nurses across the province from four different unions bargain together at one table (click here to read more about the history behind this round of bargaining). Council representatives had the monumental task of combining almost two dozen collective agreements into one each for the NSHA and the IWK.
Despite these challenges, NSGEU council representatives did an outstanding job of retaining the key provisions of the former NSGEU collective agreements for Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses and Nurse Practitioners.
The Health Authorities Act led to the creation of the Nursing Bargaining Council of Nova Scotia which was tasked with negotiating agreements for the NSHA and the IWK on behalf of nurses across Nova Scotia.
The number of bargaining committee members on the council was determined by the membership numbers in each union. NSGEU held seven of the 20 seats. NSNU held 11 seats, CUPE and Unifor had one each.
As a minority union, NSGEU was not able to control every aspect of bargaining. This meant it was not possible for NSGEU members to achieve everything we set out to accomplish.
However, working with the other unions, NSGEU bargaining committee members did an outstanding job in these circumstances.
As a result of the hard work of the committee, the resulting collective agreements will maintain much of our NSGEU language, while still achieving a number of significant improvements. The award comes into effect 60 days from November 30th, except for monetary provisions, which are effective according to the dates outlined in the collective agreement (please note: some changes may take time to be implemented by your employer, but retroactivity will apply).
NSGEU is very proud of the hard work of your representatives on the Council. That work has resulted in one of the best collective agreements in any setting in this province. We were able to maintain key pieces of your existing NSGEU agreement, while at the same time adding new benefits from the recently settled Health Care agreement, as well as new benefits contained in the former NSNU collective agreements (please see below for highlights of the agreement).
When it comes to the priority areas of Job Security, Vacation Scheduling, Holidays, Leaves, Long and Short Assignments, Service Accrual, Hours of Work, Overtime and Benefits, the Council adopted most of the former NSGEU language. Often we were able to further enhance these Articles. We kept our 48-hour short notice shift change, our half-day holiday at Christmas, and our four weeks of vacation preference in the summer.
In addition, we developed a very strong Zone Labour Management Committee model based on former NSNU language that will allow much greater labour management participation for our members. The new agreement adopts NSNU language on work load management and created a whole new Article specific to Nurse Practitioners which includes overtime.
Your committee matched the significant increases in shift and weekend premiums first achieved at the health care table and achieved 25 per cent increases in standby pay. Furthermore, we created a new article, based on NSNU language, that puts parameters around multi-site and multi-unit postings.
Our Casual nurses will also see improvements: they will get overtime when their shift is extended; if they become permanent, they can get credit for vacation time for their casual work; and rather than 1,950 hour required for an increment, they will only need 1,000 hours.
However, it is important to note that we did not achieve all we were looking for. In particular, we retained status quo for designated unit premiums. Despite your committee’s best efforts, the employers and the government were unwilling to even discuss the issue of extending leadership and practice premiums to all NSGEU nurses. We will work closely with the membership over the next 18 months to determine how to address this issue in the next round of bargaining.
Your committee was also required to change some language around classifications reviews and re-assignment, and agreed as a committee to delete call-in language and go with overtime only in those instances. And as a result of the Kaplan decision in health care, we were required to adopt telephone consults.
Your NSGEU bargaining committee members will hold a telephone town hall soon so we can go over some of the key elements of the agreement with the membership. Your committee also plans to schedule lunch & learn sessions in the new year, as well, to go through your new collective agreement in more detail with you.
NSGEU offers its thanks to the NSGEU bargaining committee members who represented the interests of NSGEU nurses so well at the bargaining table. And the Union also thanks you, the members, for your ongoing patience during this very challenging round of negotiations.
Key Highlights of New Nursing Collective Agreement:In addition to the above improvements, your bargaining committee saved many existing NSGEU benefits by ensuring they were negotiated into the new Nursing Agreement. Many are benefits that other unions did not have before. As a result, in many cases the employers attempted to negotiate a reduction or even tried to take away some of these benefits either at the nursing or the healthcare table or both.
These include:Unfortunately, we were not able to retain all existing NSGEU benefits. Language that we lost or had taken away by Arbitrator William Kaplan includes:
Bargaining Update: Province-Wide Nursing Collective Agreement 2018-12-04 2019-10-17 https://nsgeu.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/logo.png NSGEU https://nsgeu.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/logo.png 200px 200px
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