This site uses cookies to improve your experience and to provide services and advertising.
By continuing to browse, you agree to the use of cookies described in our Cookies Policy.
You may change your settings at any time but this may impact on the functionality of the site.
To learn more see our
Cookies Policy.
Download our app
'Everybody should be following the example set by nurses': Here's how to help nurses on the picket today
Niall Carson Niall Carson
AS YOU ARE reading this, the nurses strike organised by the INMO (Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation) is well underway.
From 8am this morning, until 8am tomorrow morning (31st of January), nurses across the country are taking industrial action to deal with what nurses are referring to as the “recruitment and retention crisis among members“. As you probably know, nurses are arguing that they receive insufficient wages for the very long hours that they work, and the incredibly physically, emotionally and psychologically demanding work that they do in order to look after the rest of us.
Because of the issues surrounding pay and working hours, there is a recruitment crisis – it’s hard to hire people for a job that very few people are capable of doing when the pay abroad for the same jobs is far better.
When people are hired, many find the work challenging as a result of the pay and working hours, and end up leaving the public health system to work for private companies or emigrate to somewhere where they will be paid more fairly for the work that they do. As a country, we simply cannot afford to lose any more nurses from the public health service.
There are 40,000 nurses and midwives currently signed up to the INMO. Of these 40,000, a significant number were polled on whether or not industrial action (like today’s strike) was the best step to take in order to improve working conditions, and 90% of them voted in favour of the strike.
Niall Carson Niall Carson
What can other workers learn from this strike?
Across all industries in Ireland, there are workers who have had pay-cuts since the recession, or who are working in conditions which employers claimed were necessitated by cutbacks and the recession over the last ten years.
On top of this, there’s now a whole new generation of workers aged 17-30 working for companies on contracts that list them as self-employed, which means that these employees are not entitled to sick days, holidays or any other basic benefits that our parent’s generation have/had at work.
In 2016, the government launched the slogan Keep The Recovery Going, pointing to our high employment figures to show us how much things had improved since the recession, while disregarding the issues that the recession created for many workers and ignoring the emergence of the ‘gig economy’ (a labour market characterised by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, as opposed to permanent jobs). A lot of people rightfully began to wonder where exactly this recovery was taking place.
Workers across every industry should be learning from the example set by nurses this week. Nobody should be settling for poor working conditions and insufficient pay. You can join a union relevant to your own industry here.
In the meantime, we can all do our bit to help the nurses have their demands for pay negotiations met.
6 ways you can help the nurses on the picket
DailyEdge is on Instagram!
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
INMO nurses strike Solidarity