SHARE Member in the Spotlight: Debra Clark
Deb Clark, standing for a strong contract on the University Campus |
After our most recent contract negotiations, I sat down with Deb Clark, a long-term UMass Memorial employee and SHARE union leader. She’s got a unique perspective on our contract and negotiations. Deb is a veteran negotiator and member of the SHARE Executive Board. Incidentally, in the past, she’s also been laid off from the hospital three times, and has intimate familiarity with SHARE’s work-security policy.
SHARE Turns 20! Download a flyer to post in your area
Slotting Pay by Experience in Peer-Based Titles
Peer Slotted Titles
|
Grade
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CYTOTECHNOLOGIST II
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TEC12
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DISPATCHER, COMMUNICATION SPEC
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ADM8
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INTERPRETER
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ADM7
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LPN, AMBULATORY
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NSG10
|
LPN, MAMMOGRAPHY
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NSG10
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LPN, MEDICAL GROUP
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NSG10
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STUDENT COORD, NUC MED
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TEC13
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TECH, ENDO-ADV PROCED (LPN)
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NSG11
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TECH, PHARMACY PROCUREMENT
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TEC7
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TECHNICIAN, HISTOLOGY II
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TEC10
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TECHNICIAN, PHARMACY CERT, TOC
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TEC7
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TECHNICIAN, PHARMACY CERTIFIED
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TEC7
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TECHNOL, U/S REG-CARD U/S
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TEC14
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TECHNOL, U/S REG-VASC LAB
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TEC14
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TECHNOL, U/S REG-WMN HLTH
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TEC14
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TECHNOL, U/S-VASC LAB
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TEC13
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TECHNOL,RAD INVASIVE CARDIOVAS
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, MEDICAL II
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TEC11
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TECHNOLOGIST, NUCLEAR MEDICINE
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, RAD II
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TEC12
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TECHNOLOGIST, RAD II-ANGIO
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, RAD II-CT SCAN
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, RAD II-MAMMOGRPY
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, RAD II-MULTIMODA
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, ULTRASOUND
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TEC13
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TECHNOLOGIST, ULTRASOUND REG
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TEC14
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TECHNOLOGIST,MEDICAL,BLOOD BNK
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TEC12
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THERAPIST, RADIATION I
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TEC13
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THERAPIST, RADIATION II
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TEC14
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THERAPIST, RESPIRATORY II
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TEC12
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- Anyone in a peer-based title who is below the right platform will get an additional raise to bring their pay up to the right platform.
- Most people in the peer-based titles are already at or above their platform – they will not be affected. No one’s pay will go down through slotting.
- Anyone who is not in a peer-based title will not be affected because their titles are already platform-based.
Free College Humanities Course
Workplace Violence Prevention Forum
- Workplace violence is up, the rates are especially high in hospitals, and our hospital is no exception.
- The executive leadership of UMass Memorial is very actively working on solutions.
- Our hospital needs to enlist much more help from frontline employees to make significant improvements.
Of course, in the many areas where SHARE members work, workplace violence is a big, broad, serious subject. The panel brought together experts from our hospital and medical school who spoke to the spectrum of issues. Not every question led to a clear answer. UMass Memorial President Patrick Muldoon concluded the event by noting that the efforts so far are only a beginning.
- The hospital’s Workplace Violence Working Group, which currently consists of 59 members.
- Installation of over 300 “panic buttons” at strategic places throughout the institution.
- Legislation such as Elise’s Law--named in honor of the nurse from Harrington Hospital who was recently assaulted by a patient--which pressures hospitals to increase security.
- Off Campus: 911
- University Campus Police: 6-3296
- Memorial/Hahnemann Campus Police: 4-8568
- Employee Health: 3-6400
New SHARE Rep Training
The curriculum introduces a number of topics, including:
- Who's in SHARE
- SHARE's place in the labor movement
- Using the SHARE Contract
- Building the union membership and cultivating community
- Interest-Based Negotiating Methods
- What happens in Contract Negotiations
- Why SHARE focuses on system improvement
- Unit-Based Teams, and other ways of engaging members in decision making
- Labor-Management Partnership
- Problem-Solving, including the Disciplinary Process
Workplace Violence Discussion this Friday
SHARE Career Development Workshops
Feeling confident? Come to the Interview Skills Workshop to hone your strengths |
The sessions will provide strategies, tips, and resources for maximizing your strengths as an internal candidate. We encourage you to register in advance to ensure your place in the workshop, although walk-ins will be welcome if there are empty seats. To Register, visit EL4U (additional instructions for first-time users below).
The following sessions are open for registration:
2017-2018 SHARE Executive Board and Representatives
The Executive Board (or "EBoard"), including the four officers, makes decisions about the direction of our union, and participates in contract negotiations. They are elected for two-year terms. They have responsibility for the whole union, and each board member is responsible for a few hundred members in their area.
SHARE Representatives (or "Reps") serve as the contact person for their area. They are elected for one-year terms. There is roughly one Rep for every fifty SHARE members. Some Reps are trained to help co-workers solve problems in the workplace. In addition to the currently-elected Reps, several former Reps and unofficial Reps help members in their area keep up-to-date about current SHARE news, and help their co-workers find helpful SHARE resources.
SHARE Union Leadership, 2017-18
The Executive Board (or "EBoard"), including the four officers, makes decisions about the direction of our union, and participates in contract negotiations. They are elected for two-year terms. They have responsibility for the whole union, and each board member is responsible for a few hundred members in their area.
SHARE Representatives (or "Reps") serve as the contact person for their area. They are elected for one-year terms. There is roughly one Rep for every fifty SHARE members. Some Reps are trained to help co-workers solve problems in the workplace. In addition to the currently-elected Reps, several former Reps and unofficial Reps help members in their area keep up-to-date about current SHARE news, and help their co-workers find helpful SHARE resources.
Congratulations, 2017 Union Plus Scholarship Winners!
Sam Fountain, SHARE Member and 2017 Scholarship Winner |
Sam says: I'm humbled and honored to be a recipient of a 2017 Union PLUS Scholarship Award. For the past 18 months, I've been a member of the SHARE Union, working as a Research Technician for Dr. Sanjay and Dr. Peter Rice. I'm beginning medical school here at UMass in the fall of 2017, and will use the scholarship to pay for books and other educational supplies I'll need. The cost of medical school is steep, and every penny counts. For decades my family has been benefiting from and advocating for Unionized Labor, and I'm grateful to continue this trend. Thank you to the SHARE Union for all the work you do and for advocating for workers across the University!
2018 Union Plus Scholarships
Happy Independence Day!
Overtime Opportunities for Some SHARE Members during Epic Conversion Weekends
- Qualified SHARE members can participate in the hospital's Epic Conversion and be paid Overtime (if they work more than 40 hours that week, or more than 8 hours that day). The weekend pay differential of $2.50 per hour will also be applied, as per the SHARE contract.
- Free on-site parking, lunch, and beverages will be provided.
- SHARE members commuting from off-site locations (non-Worcester campuses, such as Barre, Tri-River, etc.) will be paid the federal mileage rate, according to the SHARE Contract Agreement. (Currently 53.5 cents/mile.)
A Strong Start for Unit Based Teams
The first ever UBT Co-Lead Peer-Learning event opened with SHARE Union organizer Janet Wilder thanking everyone in the room. Janet said that the newly defined relationship between SHARE members and managers is the most important language in our contract as we aim to improve the culture of our hospital. She explained that Unit-Based Teams are the cornerstone of that agreement, the most concrete and hopeful effort toward changing how it feels to work here.
Janet is the SHARE Tri-Chair of our Labor-Management Partnership Council, along with Bart Metzger, Chief Human Resources Officer, and Jeff Smith, Chief Operating Officer,
who also
kicked off the
meeting by talking about the importance of UBTs. Jeff Smith said that involving front-line staff in fixing the problem is better than the alternative: “I could give you an answer quickly, but it would be a bad solution.”
The first UBT Peer Learning Session brought together UBT Co-Sponsors and Co-Leads from SHARE, along with their management counterparts, as well as representatives from CITC, HR, and UMMC Executive Leadership. They came together to compare notes about the challenges and successes so far in the first wave of Unit Based Teams
As the hour developed, it became clear to everyone in the room that, across the board, the Unit-Based Teams are off to a productive and promising start. Each UBT has selected one or two substantial problems to tackle in their areas. They've defined their goals, and have begun measuring the effectiveness of their ideas.
SHARE Member and Lead Cardiac Catheterization Technologist, Sue Maddalena, describes how their UBT disregarded the advice that teams should avoid tackling the hardest problems first. They're seeing early successes as they work to improve the start times of their cases.
Each UBT explained very different situations, different approaches, and different results thus far, even between the two Prescription Centers involved, on both the University and Memorial campuses. Nonetheless, common trends appeared throughout. Communication in areas with UBT's has improved, sometimes considerably. That communication is helping the day-to-day work go more smoothly, and improving the work culture.
In Primary Care, they're kicking butt and collecting data. Where employees were previously frustrated with walk-ins, they're now opportunities to collect data to fix the problem. Rita Caputo (SHARE Co-President, pictured above left) tracks the progress of their system improvements.
SHARE member and Ambulatory Services Rep Mary Misiaszek said that, in her area, she had encountered one particularly meaningful new improvement: deeper respect. In addition, she said different parts of the clinic now "appreciate what everybody did, because we didn't know what everybody did before."
Mary noted, however, that one of the major challenges they faced was just understanding one another, since each kind of work in the hospital involves its own jargon and specialized language. As an ASR, her understanding of the distinction between words like "rapid" and "stat" differs from some co-workers, who use those words within the boundaries of defined clinical guidelines.
The hospital's
Center for Innovation and Transformational Change
often came up in the discussion, with participants noting the importance of the role of CITC in providing common language for discussing improvement.
SHARE member Kim Latrobe, a Technologist in the Surgical Vascular Lab, says that her co-workers are more willing to speak up about problems now, and more optimistic about the way that management will consider their ideas.
Some in the room commented that their department staff had found it meaningful to see SHARE and hospital leadership coming together around the Unit Based Teams. Although SHARE members have experienced many different initiatives aimed at improvement over the years, this feels different. Working through issues in a process where all participants have equal voice creates mutual accountability and improved chance of continual improvement.
Bart Metzger, UMass Memorial Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer, said that hospital CEO Eric Dickson increasingly references the importance of UBT's in meetings among hospital executives. Metzger describes the function of the UBTs toward the hospital's goals of transforming and humanizing our institution, and turning the traditional management paradigm on its head.
In the recent months, the participants in these first UBT's have learned a lot about how to launch a UBT successfully . . . much of it by trial-and-error. During the Peer Learning Session, many participants thanked the UBT Coaches and their own Co-Sponsors, who have been supporting the teams with tools and strategies for tackling big problems productively.
Although the UBT model involves a lot of planning, there have definitely been surprises in their initial experiments. The participants recommended even more training and more planning time, and encouraged the Coaches and Co-Sponsors to begin working with the next wave of UBT's as soon as possible, even though those teams won't be launching until after Epic Go-Live. We look forward to hearing more from this first group of UBT's.
SHARE Staff Organizers Janet Wilder and Will Erickson collect ideas and advice for improving the launch of the next wave of Unit Based Teams
The hour-long meeting brought together union members and management from the University Campus and the Memorial Campus, not to mention a labor-management pair who commuted in from our hospital's Tri-River facility in Uxbridge.
It wasn't easy to coordinate a time when so many could be away from their desks and workstations.
W
e know that whenever employees step away from the front lines to meet, it puts more pressure on those who remain in the departments to care for patients. We recognize those of you who are working in areas with UBT's for getting this important project started in such a strong way
. Already hundreds of SHARE members have helped move the work forward. Thank you.
A NEW SHARE UNION: UMASS MEMORIAL--MARLBOROUGH HOSPITAL
Tell Your Friends: SHARE Goes to Fenway!
Use this link to download and print the Boston Red Sox "Union Night" Flyer. Give it to your friends, hang it in your personal workspace, or pin it to your local bulletin board.
For more details about how to join us this Labor Day, check out this earlier blog post, Come Cheer the Sox with SHARE: Tickets Available Now!
Come Cheer the Sox with SHARE: Tickets Available Now
Let's Go SHARE! |
- Date: Labor Day 2017 (Monday, September 4th)
- Time: 7:10 pm
- Cost: $30 in the bleachers, or $15 in the upper bleachers.
A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats: Worcester City Council Votes to Support Increases to the Minimum Wage
City Councilor Khrystian King presents his
proposal to support an increase to the minimum wage
|
Of course, another way to participate in shaping a more favorable economic climate, one that promotes fairness and well-being, is through a union. Research shows that declines in unionization are linked to increasing inequality. At the same time, researchers find that a disproportionate number of women, African Americans, and Latinos currently make less than fifteen dollars an hour.