WASHINGTON D.C. - Tens of thousands of nurses, including
Filipino Americans, are considered by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
as ‘supervisors’ and therefore not eligible to be represented by labor unions.
On October 3, the NLRB ruled that nurses
with fulltime responsibility for assigning fellow hospital workers to
particular tasks are supervisors under the federal labor law and
therefore not eligible to join unions.
The ruling by a vote of 3 to 2 (the three
appointed by President Bush and the two dissenters by President Clinton), was
hailed by businesses and roundly criticized by labor unions and other
activists.
The Asian Pacific American Labor
Alliance, AFL-CIO (APALA) condemned the decision to expand the definition of a
supervisor and strip millions of workers of the right to form a union.
APALA said Asian and Pacific Islander
American workers would be particularly impacted by this decision because so
many are concentrated in the nursing and professional occupations that are
likely to lose organizing rights.
The NLRB ruling was on a case involving
nurses, but would pave the way for employers to classify anyone who assigns
work, directs another, or uses independent judgment as a supervisor, which
would mean they are ineligible to form a union.
Registered Nurses often give instructions
to nurse aides, they would be classified as supervisors. Even if the workers
spend as little as 10-15% of their time on directing others, they could
be still be considered “supervisors.” In addition to nurses, many other jobs in
which experienced or skilled workers lead teams of other workers could also be
re-classified as “supervisory.”
In the building trades, journeymen direct
apprentices or workers on a crew. Professionals could also be classified as
“supervisors” because the very nature of professional work frequently involves
directing others and exercising independent judgment.
Over 2 million Asian and Pacific Islander
Americans could be denied the right to form a union. According to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics, 1.9 million APIAs work as professionals, including 155,000
who work as registered nurses. About 110,000 work in construction.
APALA National President Maria Somma
stated, “Asian and Pacific Islander American workers want to form unions to
improve the quality of life for their families, protect their rights, and have
a voice at work. Our numbers in unions have increased for two years in row
because of the many successes in organizing workers in industries such as
health care. This ruling cuts off a crucial pathway to economic justice for
Asian and Pacific Islander American workers. The right to form unions is a
basic human right recognized around the world. It’s an outrage that it is not
being recognized right here in America.”
MANILA – A Cabinet decision for nurses to
retake the nursing licensure exams
has been held in abeyance by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
The Cabinet earlier said all those who
took this year’s nursing licensure exams -both passers and flunkers -will have
to retake the tests after the Cabinet decided it is the only way to remove the
doubt cast on the results by those who had cheated, an official said.
More than 17,000 of the 40,000 nurses
that took the tests in June passed, but the results were tainted after
officials discovered that test questions had been leaked to some of the
examinees.
“Obviously, those who participated in the
cheating should retake the exams, but we do not know who they are," Labor
Secretary Arturo Brion said.
“But for those who did not cheat, this is
a way to erase the taint over their passing."
Brion, who was recently ordered to
oversee the Professional Regulation Commission, the agency administering the
tests, said the retake would likely be held in December simultaneously with the
next regular nursing exams.
But he doubted if the new tests would
take place ahead of the regular exams because there were many vacancies in the
board of nursing licensure tests that had yet to be filled by President Gloria
Macagapal Arroyo.
Brion said the retake would cover only
Tests 3 and 5, the tests were some of the questions had been leaked, and at no
cost to examinees. The President has set aside P52 million for the exams,
although the commission has said they will cost only P14 million.