Community Corner
Nurses Rally For COVID Crisis Pay: 'Do Not Slap Us In The Face'
Hospital workers rallied outside Stony Brook hospitals on East End: 'I prayed every day that I didn't bring COVID home to my family.'
GREENPORT, NY — Holding signs and chanting, a group of front line workers held a rally outside both Stony Brook Southampton Hospital and Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital in Greenport Wednesday to demand crisis, or hazard, pay after their recent work during the coronavirus pandemic.
"What do we want? Crisis pay!" they cried as they marched. "When do we want it? Now. Be fair to those who care!"
Those marching, represented by the 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East union, said they are asking for the same crisis pay afforded hospital workers in other networks, including a $2,500 recognition payment and a week's vacation.
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According to a union source, 1199 has said it wants workers to get the industry standard set by the Northwell Health network, $2,500 per worker.
“Stony Brook Southampton Hospital (SBSH) and Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital (SBELIH) are in talks with 1199," said a spokesperson for both Stony Brook Southampton Hospital and Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital. "We value the skilled work of every member of our staff. Our primary concern has always been, and continues to be, our employees’ safety as they provide the highest quality of care for our patients. We work every day to foster a positive work environment where all employees are valued and respected.”
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Joan Kart, who attended the rally, said workers wanted crisis pay for all employees who showed up for work in the face of the crisis. "And management does not want to give us a fair and equitable pay. The community stood up with us through the whole time. Now the management is turning their back on us."
Speaking about the experience of working during the pandemic, Kart said asking for crisis pay was "not an unfair" request: "We've given up a lot. We've been in the hospital sick ourselves. We haven't been able to see family members — it was three to four months that we haven't see any of our grandchildren. It was hard on all of us. We'd go home at night totally exhausted."
She added: "Sometimes, it was really bad, when you had to intubate people that you know. And they shouldn't have been there — but the COVID got to them. It was hard for all of us."
Kelli Gatlin, who protested outside Stony Brook Southampton Hospital, said hospital workers faced the coronavirus crisis, despite the risks. She works in endoscopy but she was brought back into patient care to help meet the growing need, often unable to see her own family.
"What choice did we have?" she asked. Not only did they need to work, she said, but as health care workers, they were called to help others despite their own fears.
And now, she said, she and her colleagues are waiting for some equity and fair resolution.
Kenya Clinton Coles, a nurse at Eastern Long Island Hospital, described facing her own fears in order to serve coronavirus patients.
"At one point, I just went into the bathroom and cried," she said. "I realized there was no way I would go through this experience without seeing or treating a coronavirus patient."
She recalled one woman in the hospital, who was deeply emotional, fearful not only because she had coronavirus but because she was afraid she may have infected her mother.
The woman was completely alone, very ill, and very emotionally distraught, Clinton Coles said. "Mine was the only face she saw," she said. "I had to be there for her. And anyone I work with would have done the same. That is the very essence of human caring."
But with a baby grandson, Justin, who was born premature and spent months in the hospital before returning home in December, the risks were very real, Clinton Coles said.
"The thought of putting this little life in danger . . ." she said. "At the end of the day after work, when I got in the car, I felt thankful to God. I prayed every day that I didn’t bring COVID home to my family."
There are the moments that haunt, Clinton Coles said. One patient appeared to have been doing well, and she told the woman's daughter that her mother was holding her own. But that day, her blood oxygen level plummeted and she had to be transferred; later, the woman died. "I felt so guilty," she said, knowing that the woman's daughter would get the call telling her that her mother hadn't survived. "The virus is like that, it's so fast," Clinton Coles said. "You never know who would get it, who would be next. It was terrifying."
Clinton Coles brought her baby grandson to the rally Wednesday. "I want them to see Justin as a symbol of what nurses and other staff put on the line to provide excellent care during the pandemic," she said. "And to know recognition is warranted at whatever we proposed to the employers."
She added: "We went back to work each day knowing that we had to go beyond care — if that is possible."
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