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Thursday, September 17, 2020

Wellsville: Highland Park Nursing Home STRIKE 9/17 - press release

On Thursday, essential healthcare workers are walking out on a for-profit corporation that refuses to put people before profits. Caregivers are seeking livable wages, affordable health insurance, quality care for their residents, and an end to management’s unlawful threats and intimidation.

Tomorrow morning (9/17), more than 50 nursing home workers represented by 1199SEIU, United Healthcare Workers East, at Highland Park Nursing Home in Wellsville, NY will walk out to protest management’s unlawful threats and intimidation tactics and the lack of a collective bargaining agreement. For more than two years, workers have tried to reach a deal with management that includes basic union protections, fair wages, affordable health insurance, and training opportunities but have been ignored.

“In 2018 we voted to join in union because we felt we were being mistreated,” says Maggie Phillips, a Certified Nursing Assistant at Highland Park. “For 25 months we have met and bargaining with our corporate employer all the while dealing with threats, intimidation, and our co-workers getting suspended. What we want is simple - more money to take care of our families and affordable health insurance so that we can take care of ourselves and our residents. With all that is going on, refusing good health care to nursing workers is absolutely inhumane!”

Highland Park is owned by Excelsior Group, LLC, a New York metropolitan area for-profit corporation with no ties to Wellsville or the people that live here. Highland Park staff, however, are from this community. They are our neighbors, our friends, and our family members. More than that, they are the people that we trust to care for our loved ones in the nursing home.

“Our decision to strike was not something that we came to easily. It is a last resort after more than two years of negotiations,” says Ellen Drew, a Licensed Practical Nurse at Highland Park. “While our employer likes to call us ‘irresponsible’ for taking action, we love our residents and feel that it would be irresponsible not to strike to protect them. Only by winning better wages and healthcare we can afford will they have a chance at receiving the quality and continuity of care they deserve.”

 

The two-day strike will commence at 6:30am on Thursday, September 17 and healthcare workers plan to return to work on Saturday, September 19.