Locked in the most contentious contract talks in a quarter-century, 14 Twin Cities hospitals and their 12,000 nurses are bracing for a strike that could start as soon as June 1 and send hospitals scrambling to staff their wards.
The nurses will vote May 19 whether to authorize a walkout.
Nurses say the hospitals are using the weak economy as an excuse to cut pension benefits and change work rules in ways that will endanger patients. The hospitals, which are nonprofit, say that they're merely adapting to economic realities and that patients will be fine.
In 1984, the last time talks imploded for the hospitals group, 6,000 nurses walked out for five weeks in what remains the biggest nurse strike in U.S. history.
Now, as then, the hospitals plan to continue operating and are prepared to hire thousands of temporary replacements. They say they have made contingency plans and already have secured "a number of nurses." A California agency has sent e-mails looking to recruit 2,000 replacement nurses at up to $4,770 a week -- three times the typical pay of a Twin Cities nurse.
The nurses, meanwhile, plan to demonstrate outside Twin Cities hospitals this week, hoping to rally public support.
They also have mobilized online, posting copies of contract proposals on the union website, www.mnnurses.org, and updates on Facebook and Twitter. There's even a video of athletes from the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Wild "thanking Minnesota nurses for the work they do!"
"They're proposing to eliminate every gain we've made since the 1984 strike," said Joni Ketter, director of organizing and field operations for the Minnesota Nurses Association.