Nurses launch strike at Meriter hospital, the first in the facility's history
Striking nurses and supporters circle the UnityPoint Health-Meriter hospital in Madison on the first day of a five-day walkout Tuesday. (Photo by Erik Gunn/Wisconsin Examiner)
With a spirited rally, a picket line march around the building and a small brass band, nurses at UnityPoint Health-Meriter hospital in Madison launched a five-day walkout Tuesday, reiterating their demands for changes in safety practices, minimum ratios of nurses to patients and improved pay.
The strike — the first ever by nurses at Meriter hospital — is scheduled to run through Saturday. It follows the end of bargaining on Monday, May 19, when the nurses' union bargaining team turned down the hospital management's latest proposal.
Services Employees International Union (SEIU) Wisconsin and UnityPoint Health-Meriter have been in negotiations since earlier this year on a new contract covering about 950 nurses. The nurses' most recent two-year agreement expired in late March and they have since been working without a contract.
The nurses' contract demands include establishing required ratios of nurses to patients, improved safety for hospital employees and pay increases — particularly for senior nurses, according to union officials.
'Time and time again, Meriter's management refused to meet us halfway,' said nurse Lindsey Miller, one of three bargaining team members who spoke at the strike's opening-day rally Tuesday morning. 'At our last bargaining session, it was management, not nurses, who walked away from the bargaining table.'
Miller said the most recent management officer included 'an unacceptable raise that doesn't cover the cost of living' and made 'no progress' towards the nurses' union's demands for staffing commitments or security improvements.
'I am striking because I love working here,' said Madison Vander Hill, a birthing center nurse and one of six union speakers at the rally. 'I love getting to walk alongside and care for families as they go through one of the most transformative experiences of their lives.'
Vander Hill said she and other nurses were striking 'because we must see tangible change from management in order to ensure that safety and security are prioritized and the things we love about the work that we do are protected.'
Her coworker, Audrey Willems Van Dijk, said the nurses' concerns extended to concerns for the hospital's patients.
'We are fighting for every single person who walks through Meriter's doors,' she said. 'Yes, we deserve adequate compensation, but more than that, we deserve safety and security for ourselves and our community. We deserve respect.'
Dane County Executive Melissa Agard declared her support for the nurses and connected their dispute with former Gov. Scott Walker's signature legislation after he took office in 2011 — Act 10, stripping most public workers of most union rights.
'It was his mission to crack the foundation of union rights in the state of Wisconsin. And that crack has continued not only in Wisconsin but across our nation, and you guys are here to say, 'No more,'' Agard said.
As the strike got underway this week, Meriter told nurses that health benefits — including health insurance — would be cut off as of June 1 for nurses who do not report for their first scheduled shift during the strike this week.
A union spokesperson said the effect of the order would be to cut off benefits for strikers for the month of June if the two sides don't reach a tentative agreement on Thursday, when their next bargaining session is scheduled.
Meriter spokesperson Nicole Aimone confirmed in an email message Tuesday that nurses who do not report for their first shift during the strike will be put on 'inactive status' through Sunday, June 1, with their benefits ending as of that date.
Nurses whose benefits are cut off would have to use the federal law known as COBRA to maintain their coverage, paying for their insurance out of pocket. The law, enacted in the 1980s, enables fired or laid-off workers to maintain their employer's health insurance temporarily at their own cost.
'They will have the ability to re-enroll once they are placed back into active employee status,' Aimone said.
The union has filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board over the hospital's action.
'It is outrageous and it is disgusting,' said Ben Wikler, the outgoing chair of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin, addressing the rally. Wikler went on to lead hundreds of sign-carrying nurses and supporters in chanting, 'Union busting is disgusting!'
'When management says you'll lose your health insurance if you insist that there [should be] enough nurses on the floor to make sure that everyone is taken care of — it is disgusting,' Wikler said.
He described the dispute in the larger context of President Donald Trump's return to the White House.
'They think that the Trump administration and the National Labor Relations Board that this administration has gotten is going to turn its back on working people,' Wikler said.
'They will still have to come back to the negotiating table and they will have to do what's right, because you are building the power to make them do what's right,' he added.
The hospital is continuing to operate during the strike. Aimone said that the hospital has contracted with an outside agency for replacement 'travel nurses' to support ongoing patient care.
She said she did not have information on the cost for the contract nurses who are filling in during the walkout.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Budget negotiations between Gov. Evers, Republican leaders at an end for now
Negotiations on the state budget between Gov. Tony Evers and Republican lawmakers broke down on Wednesday. Evers delivers his 2025 state budget address. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner) Republican lawmakers are planning to move forward on writing the two-year state budget without input from across the aisle after negotiations with Gov. Tony Evers broke down on Wednesday. Senate and Assembly leaders and Evers each released statements on Wednesday in the early evening saying that while negotiations have been in good faith, they are ending for now after meetings late on Tuesday evening and on Wednesday morning. Evers said Republicans were walking away from the talks after being unwilling to compromise, while Republicans said Evers' requests weren't reasonable. 'Both sides of these negotiations worked to find compromise and do what is best for the state of Wisconsin,' Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu (R-Oostburg) and Joint Finance Committee co-chair Sen. Howard Marklein (R-Spring Green) said in a statement. 'However, we have reached a point where Governor Evers' spending priorities have extended beyond what taxpayers can afford.' Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) and Rep. Mark Born (R-Beaver Dam) left the possibility of future negotiations open in a separate statement. 'Assembly Republicans remain open to discussions with Governor Evers in hopes of finding areas of agreement, however after meeting until late last night and again this morning, it appears the two sides remain far apart,' the lawmakers said. Vos and Born said JFC will continue 'using our long-established practices to craft a state budget that contains meaningful tax relief and responsible spending levels with the goal of finishing on time.' In previous sessions this has meant that the Republican committee throws out all of Evers' proposals, writes the budget itself, passes it with minimal Democratic support and sends the bill to Evers — who has often signed it with many (sometimes controversial) partial vetoes. LeMahieu and Marklein noted that the Republican-led committee has created budgets in the last three legislative sessions that Evers has signed and they are 'confident' lawmakers will pass a 'responsible budget' this session that Evers will sign. Lawmakers have less than a month before the state's June 30 budget deadline. If a new budget isn't approved and signed into law by then, the state will continue to operate under the current budget. Evers said in a statement that he is disappointed Republicans are deciding to write the budget without Democratic support. 'The concept of compromise is simple — everyone gets something they want, and no one gets everything they want,' Evers said. He added that he told lawmakers that he would support their half of priorities, including their top tax cut proposals, even though they were similar to ones he previously vetoed, but he wanted agreements from them as well. 'Unfortunately, Republicans couldn't agree to support the top priorities in my half of the deal, which included meaningful investments for K-12 schools, to continue Child Care Counts to help lower the cost of child care for working families and to prevent further campus closures and layoffs at our UW System,' Evers said. 'We've spent months trying to have real, productive conversations with Republican lawmakers in hopes of finding compromise and passing a state budget that everyone could support — and that, most importantly, delivers for the people of Wisconsin. I am admittedly disappointed that Republican lawmakers aren't willing to reach consensus and common ground and have decided to move forward without bipartisan support instead.' Democratic leaders said that Republicans are refusing to make investments in the areas that Wisconsinites want. Assembly Minority Leader Greta Neubauer (D-Racine) and Senate Minority Leader Dianne Hesselbein (D-Middleton) said in a joint statement that it's disappointing Republicans are walking away from negotiations. 'The people of Wisconsin have a reasonable expectation that their elected leaders will work together to produce a state budget that prioritizes what matters most: lowering costs for families and investing in public education,' the lawmakers said. 'This decision creates yet more uncertainty in a difficult time. Democrats will continue to stand up for all Wisconsinites and work to move Wisconsin forward through the budget process.' Democrats on the budget committee accused Republicans of giving in to the 'extremist wing of their party' by walking away from the negotiations and not committing to 'fully funding our public schools, preventing the closure of child care centers, or meeting the healthcare needs of Wisconsinites.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Budget negotiations between Gov. Evers, Republican leaders at an end for now
Negotiations on the state budget between Gov. Tony Evers and Republican lawmakers broke down on Wednesday. Evers delivers his 2025 state budget address. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner) Republican lawmakers are planning to move forward on writing the two-year state budget without input from across the aisle after negotiations with Gov. Tony Evers broke down on Wednesday. Senate and Assembly leaders and Evers each released statements on Wednesday in the early evening saying that while negotiations have been in good faith, they are ending for now after meetings late on Tuesday evening and on Wednesday morning. Evers said Republicans were walking away from the talks after being unwilling to compromise, while Republicans said Evers' requests weren't reasonable. 'Both sides of these negotiations worked to find compromise and do what is best for the state of Wisconsin,' Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu (R-Oostburg) and Joint Finance Committee co-chair Sen. Howard Marklein (R-Spring Green) said in a statement. 'However, we have reached a point where Governor Evers' spending priorities have extended beyond what taxpayers can afford.' Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) and Rep. Mark Born (R-Beaver Dam) left the possibility of future negotiations open in a separate statement. 'Assembly Republicans remain open to discussions with Governor Evers in hopes of finding areas of agreement, however after meeting until late last night and again this morning, it appears the two sides remain far apart,' the lawmakers said. Vos and Born said JFC will continue 'using our long-established practices to craft a state budget that contains meaningful tax relief and responsible spending levels with the goal of finishing on time.' In previous sessions this has meant that the Republican committee throws out all of Evers' proposals, writes the budget itself, passes it with minimal Democratic support and sends the bill to Evers — who has often signed it with many (sometimes controversial) partial vetoes. LeMahieu and Marklein noted that the Republican-led committee has created budgets in the last three legislative sessions that Evers has signed and they are 'confident' lawmakers will pass a 'responsible budget' this session that Evers will sign. Lawmakers have less than a month before the state's June 30 budget deadline. If a new budget isn't approved and signed into law by then, the state will continue to operate under the current budget. Evers said in a statement that he is disappointed Republicans are deciding to write the budget without Democratic support. 'The concept of compromise is simple — everyone gets something they want, and no one gets everything they want,' Evers said. He added that he told lawmakers that he would support their half of priorities, including their top tax cut proposals, even though they were similar to ones he previously vetoed, but he wanted agreements from them as well. 'Unfortunately, Republicans couldn't agree to support the top priorities in my half of the deal, which included meaningful investments for K-12 schools, to continue Child Care Counts to help lower the cost of child care for working families and to prevent further campus closures and layoffs at our UW System,' Evers said. 'We've spent months trying to have real, productive conversations with Republican lawmakers in hopes of finding compromise and passing a state budget that everyone could support — and that, most importantly, delivers for the people of Wisconsin. I am admittedly disappointed that Republican lawmakers aren't willing to reach consensus and common ground and have decided to move forward without bipartisan support instead.' Democratic leaders said that Republicans are refusing to make investments in the areas that Wisconsinites want. Assembly Minority Leader Greta Neubauer (D-Racine) and Senate Minority Leader Dianne Hesselbein (D-Middleton) said in a joint statement that it's disappointing Republicans are walking away from negotiations. 'The people of Wisconsin have a reasonable expectation that their elected leaders will work together to produce a state budget that prioritizes what matters most: lowering costs for families and investing in public education,' the lawmakers said. 'This decision creates yet more uncertainty in a difficult time. Democrats will continue to stand up for all Wisconsinites and work to move Wisconsin forward through the budget process.' Democrats on the budget committee accused Republicans of giving in to the 'extremist wing of their party' by walking away from the negotiations and not committing to 'fully funding our public schools, preventing the closure of child care centers, or meeting the healthcare needs of Wisconsinites.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Bill rewards employers for child care aid. Providers say it won't fix crisis.
Children at Mariposa Learning Center in Fitchburg. (2023 file photo by Erik Gunn/Wisconsin Examiner) While providers, their supporters and Democratic lawmakers are pressing for a substantial continuing direct state investment in Wisconsin's child care sector, Republicans in the Legislature are pursuing another route: expanding a child care tax credit for employers. So far, child care providers and some small business owners aren't interested. The legislation circulated in draft form in early May. On Friday, May 30, it was formally introduced in the Assembly (AB 283) and the state Senate (SB 291). 'We really think it's an important opportunity to reward employers for getting involved in child care,' Neil Kline, who says he encouraged GOP lawmakers to draft the tax credit legislation, told the Examiner. Kline is executive director of Family Friendly Workplaces, a nonprofit based in Woodville that works with businesses in Burnett, Pierce, Polk and St. Croix counties. The organization certifies employers as family-friendly 'to support their recruitment and retention efforts,' Kline said. To that end, one of its missions is focusing on workforce-related problems such as housing and child care access. In early May Sen. Howard Marklein (R-Spring Green) and Rep. Karen Hurd (R-Withee) circulated the proposed bill seeking cosponsors. The legislation was written 'to encourage more businesses to invest in child care in their communities,' Marklein and Hurd wrote in their May 12 cosponsor memo. 'These changes will increase the number of available child care slots and provide more options for families.' The legislation has been introduced while child care providers and Democrats are continuing their campaigns to revive direct support for the child care sector. During the COVID-19 pandemic the Evers administration used federal pandemic relief funds to pay child care providers monthly stipends through the Child Care Counts program. The $20 million a month that the state doled out helped providers stabilize child care, increasing workers' pay while keeping care more affordable for families. When Evers tried to use $360 million from the 2023-25 budget to continue Child Care Counts with state money, none of the Legislature's Republican majority got behind the measure. The governor was later able to reallocate other federal dollars to fund Child Care Counts through June 2025, but at half the original amount: $10 million a month. With lawmakers now writing the 2025-27 budget, Evers, child care providers and their advocates have been campaigning for $480 million to continue the program for the next two years. A survey commissioned by the state and conducted by the University of Wisconsin Institute for Research on Poverty forecast closures and tuition hikes if the state payments end. At their very first budget vote, however, Republicans on the Legislature's Joint Finance Committee removed the proposal along with more than 600 other items Evers had included in his budget draft. The GOP outnumbers the Democrats 3 to 1 on the committee. Democratic lawmakers responded by circulating a draft stand-alone bill to reinstate the Evers proposal. 'Child care providers are facing increasing cost to operate while still making poverty-level wages,' said Sen. Sarah Keyeski (D-Lodi) at a May 22 press conference to announce the Democrats' bill. 'This has made it extremely difficult to hire and retain quality staff. [Meanwhile] providers desperately want to avoid rising costs and rates on families already struggling to afford child care.' As yet no Republican lawmakers have gotten behind the Child Care Counts proposal. Instead, the bills that Marklein and Hurd have introduced would make changes to the Business Development Tax Credit, which is provided through the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC). That tax credit is granted to reward a variety of business investments and reduces the state income tax that a business pays by the amount of the credit. Currently, a business that spends money on starting a child care program for its employees can get up to 15% of that cost taken off its tax bill. The credit applies only to capital investments, however — building or remodeling the child care facility. 'Unfortunately, we have heard that the current program parameters limit the incentive for businesses to invest in child care programs,' Marklein and Hurd wrote in their co-sponsor memo. 'While many businesses may want to provide child care as a benefit to employees, the current credit limitations reduce the incentive for this investment.' In addition to capital expenditures, the draft bill would extend the tax credit to cover 15% of several other costs: An employer's spending on child care program operations; Spending to reimburse employees for their child care expenses; Spending to buy or reserve openings for its employees at a child care center; Contributions an employer makes to an employee's flexible spending account for dependent care. The draft bill also allows the tax credit for 'any other cost or expense incurred due to a benefit provided by an employer to facilitate the provision or utilization by employees of child care services.' The tax credit would be refundable: Even if the credit totals more than the employer pays in taxes, the company would get its full value back from the Wisconsin Department of Revenue. It also would give a refund to nonprofit employers, which don't pay taxes. 'While not a silver bullet, these changes are another step in the right direction to address the child care issue in Wisconsin,' Marklein and Hurd wrote in their memo. Kline, the Family Friendly Workplaces director, said the proposal would help engage employers more directly in addressing child care shortages. 'We really think it lays the groundwork for ongoing, self-sustaining support of child care in Wisconsin,' he said. 'The primary goal is to help introduce new money into the child care — really, the child care ecosystem — by rewarding employers to support the ongoing expenses of child care, because the reality is that the sector needs additional money in it.' Kline said he understands that 'the ongoing operational economics' is a central problem for the child care sector. 'That's why we are so focused on helping employers find avenues and be rewarded for helping defray the expenses that are related to child care and helping support that ongoing operational side of child care.' To date the existing child care employer tax credit hasn't had any takers, according to the WEDC. In January, as part of an overall evaluation of the state's business development tax credit, an outside consultant told WEDC that 'due to the high operational costs of childcare centers, affordability would likely be better achieved through subsidy as opposed to a tax incentive.' The proposal to expand the tax credit isn't gaining traction with providers or small business owners. Main Street Alliance, which organizes small business owners to advocate for state and national legislation, has already announced objections to the bill. 'These kinds of programs and tax credits are often advantageous for employers who can afford compliance and the procedural costs and have economies of scale,' said Shawn Phetteplace, MSA's national campaign director. That leaves out the typical small business, said Phetteplace, who sent lawmakers a memo calling the proposal 'deeply unserious.' Evan Dannells, a chef and owner of two Madison restaurants, questioned how a relatively small business like his would benefit from the tax credit. Of his eight full-time employees, one has two children. Most of the others are graduate students. Directly paying for the one employee's child care, even if receiving a tax credit, doesn't feel fair to the others who don't have that expense, Dannells said. 'If you put the onus of taking care of child care on the employer, the employer won't hire people with children,' he said. Dannells considers the cost of child care a legitimate use of his tax dollars. 'This is why government should be doing this,' he said. He observed that children are required to go to school when they reach the age of first grade. 'Why can't we take care of them from age 1 to 5?' While the tax credit may make it easier for a particular company's employees to afford child care thanks to the employer's support, skeptics of the proposal say that assistance only helps some people — not the system as a whole. 'That doesn't help keep the doors open,' said Heather Murray, who operates a child care center in Waunakee. 'We're hitting crisis mode and centers are shutting down now, and a quarter of them will be gone if [Child Care Counts] isn't renewed. We need the investment to go directly to providers to make sure that the doors stay open.' National child care analyst Eliot Haspel is also skeptical. Haspel is a fellow at Capita, a think tank that works in the area of family policy. In February 2024, the think tank New America published his report raising questions about the impact of various employer-sponsored child care benefits. Haspel views child care as a public good that benefits society broadly. For that reason, he contends, it should serve families regardless of whether they work for an employer able to fund a child care benefit. 'Small business will never be able to offer a really robust child care workplace benefit,' Haspel says. That puts small businesses and small business employees at a disadvantage if supporting child care is primarily an employer's responsibility, he argues. The large number of low-wage workers and 'gig workers' 'also raises the specter of increasing inequalities,' he writes in the New America report. Haspel says that tying child care to a job also locks people into a job — or strands them from needed care if they lose their job. It also disrupts children's early education at a time when they need consistent and reliable connections with their caregivers, advocates say. 'It's really bad for workers and it's really bad for kids for your child care to be tied to your employment,' Sen. Kelda Roys said at the Democrats' May 22 press conference. Tying health insurance to employment has been 'a disaster,' Roys said. Health care is 'rationed based on the job that you have or the wealth that you have,' she added, 'and we do not want to exacerbate the current problems in our child care system by tying it to people's employment.' In his New America report and in an interview, Haspel says the problem isn't providing child care at the workplace. 'I'm not against the idea of onsite child care — that can make all the sense in the world,' he says. 'You can have an onsite center as part of a publicly funded system' — one to which employers contribute as taxpayers. Focusing on the employer, however, carries with it 'an opportunity cost,' Haspel says. 'The more we say child care should be solved primarily through employers, the harder it is to say we need a fully public system that is universal and reaches everyone.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX