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WSWS : News
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: Ireland
Irish hospitals hit by first national nurses' strike
By Mike Ingram
21 October 1999
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The Irish Republic was hit on Tuesday by the biggest strike
in its history, as 27,500 nurses began indefinite strike action
over pay and working conditions.
Members of all four nursing unions backed the strike by massive
majorities on October 11. They rejected an offer by the Labour
Court (a cross union-government body) for an Ir£60 million
pay deal (£49 million), which the government claimed amounted
to a 23 percent rise on basic salaries.
The largest union, the Irish Nurses Organisation, voted 96
percent in favour of strike action. Paramedics IMPACT and the
Psychiatric Nurses Association members backed the action by 89
percent, while the professional union SIPTU members voted 82 percent
in favour.
The votes reflect growing resentment throughout the public
sector towards the social contract, which has been
in place since 1987. This tripartite partnership between the government,
employers and the unions has been credited with playing the key
role in Ireland's economic success over the past period.
The "Partnership 2000" deal, which ends in the New
Year, has kept wages down in return for tax cuts. The unions argue
that this had led to a systematic drop in nurses' earnings in
comparison with other sectors. The average difference in hourly
rate for nursing grades is £2.09 below comparative sections,
and for a ward sister is £2.75 below.
From Tuesday morning, more than 1,000 pickets were dispatched
to health sites across the country, including hospitals, blood
transfusion centres and old people's homes. All non-emergency
operations have been cancelled and doctors have had to take over
nurses' tasks. Health workers have pledged to continue emergency
cover, despite a decision that workers would not be paid for such
work. Many Dublin hospitals are reliant on a skeleton staff.
In a press statement the Southern Health Board, which covers
Cork and Kerry, said that all non-emergency admissions, day-care
services and community nursing services have been cancelled. At
the biggest hospital in the region, Cork University Hospital,
90 of 550 beds have been closed. The number of nurses on duty
has been reduced to 70, just over a quarter of the normal figure.
At Tralee General Hospital, 64 of 324 beds have been closed. Nurses
on duty have fallen from 140 to just 55 since the strike began.
The same picture can be seen at hospitals throughout the country.
Only a handful of nurses turned up for work at three of the Midlands'
acute General Hospitals. In the southeast, just over a quarter
of the 2,450 nurses normally on duty were working.
The strike has received widespread public sympathy. At picket
lines outside hospitals, people passing on public transport waved
to the pickets, motorists honked horns and pedestrians stopped
to wish the nurses well. While cautious in the face of this public
support, the Ahern government is resisting any settlement that
goes outside the established framework of social partnership.
To this end there have been frantic discussions between government
and union representatives. Leaders of the Irish Congress of Trade
Unions (ICTU) met the four nurses' unions on Tuesday afternoon
to explore possibilities for a framework for talks. Health Minister
Brian Cowen said that the ICTU could now have a key role in the
effort to end the dispute.
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