St. Luke's Hospital v. NLRB

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 10, 2001
Docket00-3169
StatusPublished

This text of St. Luke's Hospital v. NLRB (St. Luke's Hospital v. NLRB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Luke's Hospital v. NLRB, (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 00-3169 No. 00-3410 ___________

St. Luke’s Episcopal-Presbyterian * Hospitals, Inc., * * Petitioner - Cross-Respondent, * Petitions for Review or Enforcement * of an Order of the National v. * Labor Relations Board. * National Labor Relations Board, * * Respondent - Cross-Petitioner. * ___________

Submitted: April 10, 2001

Filed: October 10, 2001 ___________

Before LOKEN, Circuit Judge, BOGUE,* District Judge, and GOLDBERG,** Judge of the United States Court of International Trade. ___________

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

In 1991, Carol Hollowood became a registered nurse first assistant (“RNFA”) in the labor and delivery department of St. Luke’s Episcopal-Presbyterian Hospital

* The HONORABLE ANDREW W. BOGUE, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota, sitting by designation. ** The HONORABLE RICHARD W. GOLDBERG, sitting by designation. in Chesterfield, Missouri. On June 1, 1998, Hollowood appeared on a local television news broadcast and accused St. Luke’s of “jeopardizing the health of mothers and babies” by altering the shift assignments and responsibilities of the labor and delivery RNFAs. Hollowood was discharged four days later. The Textile Processors, Service Trades, Health Care, Professional and Technical Employees Union (the “Union”) filed an unfair labor practice charge on her behalf. After a hearing, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that St. Luke’s violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1) and (3), by terminating Hollowood on account of protected concerted activity. St. Luke’s petitions for review of the Board order, and the Board cross-petitions for enforcement. We grant the petition for review and deny enforcement.

The primary duties of a labor and delivery RNFA are to assist surgeons in Cesarean-sections, tubal ligations, and hysterectomies performed in St. Luke’s obstetrical operating rooms. In August 1997, St. Luke’s advised the eight labor and delivery RNFAs that the hospital would alter their work assignments from two twenty-four-hour shifts to four twelve-hour shifts each week, increase their non- surgical patient care duties, and replace three RNFAs with lesser-trained operating room staff. The RNFAs opposed these changes. All but one declined to stay in the labor and delivery department working twelve-hour shifts, instead accepting St. Luke’s offer of twenty-four-hour RNFA positions in other surgery departments. Hollowood objected because twenty-four-hour shifts gave her more time to work at a second job and because she did not want to take on more non-surgical patient duties. However, she agreed to continue working twenty-four-hour shifts in the labor and delivery department during a transition period, where she helped train new nurses for the open RNFA positions.

In the ensuing months, the labor and delivery RNFAs complained to physicians and hospital administrators that patient care would be compromised by these changes. In addition, Hollowood and Mike O’Neil, an operating room RNFA, used this dispute

-2- to renew their efforts to organize St. Luke’s nurses on behalf of the Union. By March 1998, O’Neil, Hollowood, and a “core group of coworkers” were openly campaigning to organize St. Luke’s nurses. Hollowood testified that she persuaded forty-two nurses to sign petitions to be represented by the Union. St. Luke’s concedes it was aware of Hollowood’s participation in these organizing activities.

On June 1, O’Neil, Hollowood, and a contract physician in the labor and delivery department arranged to be interviewed by a reporter for a local TV station. Part of the interview appeared on that evening’s news, with Hollowood’s remarks playing a lead role:

ANCHOR: Our top story at ten, some doctors and nurses at St. Luke’s Hospital are angry about changes they say threaten the health of expectant mothers in the delivery room.

ANCHOR 2: The changes affect the medical teams that perform C- sections at St. Luke’s. . . .

REPORTER: Well Rick and Karen there are eight specially trained nurses that assist staff obstetricians with C-sections at St. Luke’s. They each have anywhere between 15 to 23 years of seniority with the hospital and a whole lot of experience. Until recently, the nurses worked on a system of 24 hour shifts they say was essential to the care of mothers ready to deliver. Well, now the RNs accuse the hospital of cutting their shift in order to replace them with less qualified employees.

Registered nurse first assistant Carol Hollowood says when a patient comes into the delivery room at St. Luke’s, she’s treated like a member of the family. But Hollowood accuses the powers that be of jeopardizing the health of mothers and babies by offering her and her counterparts short shifts and more responsibilities.

CAROL HOLLOWOOD R.N.: Initially two years ago we had three people on a 24 hour shift, because, as we said before, Dr. Gearhart said,

-3- that labor and delivery you have emergencies that can happen not one at a time but possibly two at a time where we needed a crew of people that were qualified to assume the responsibility of these emergencies for mother and baby. And then two years ago, they reduced to two and didn’t allow us to do two sections at one time or two cases at one time in labor and delivery. And now what they’re trying to do is have one person cover what three people did two years ago.

REPORTER: Hollowood opted to transfer to another section of the hospital. She’s certain that her replacement won’t have her qualifications.

Following Hollowood’s statement, the contract physician complained that nurses were being replaced by “patient care technicians.” O’Neil then stated that nurses would use collective bargaining “to refocus the issues back on the patient and fight for their rights for adequate staffing.”

At the Board hearing, hospital administrators testified that, in the three days following June 1, they received strong negative reactions to Hollowood’s public statement from many St. Luke’s physicians and nurses. On June 2, Dr. George Tucker, the hospital’s president, received a hand-written note from Dr. Ron Leidenfrost, the chief cardiovascular surgeon, stating that if the two disloyal nurses were still employed at the hospital, “please keep them out of my work areas -- they are poison to this organization.” Dr. David Krajcovic, Chief of Surgery, complained to Tucker personally and then wrote on June 4: “I do not care to have [Hollowood] work in my room during OR procedures.” Dr. Carlton Pearse, an OBGYN surgeon responsible for training RNFAs, wrote on June 4: “Since Carol’s public statements, the staff on the L&D floors have indicated that they do not wish to work with her and feel she will be constantly watching them to see if they do anything wrong and then run and tell the media. . . . I will not work with her or have her deal with my patients.” Gail Wagner, Vice President of Patient Services, testified that physicians and staff were very upset that Hollowood had publicly said “they weren’t competent and that

-4- things were unsafe for the patients, which was not the case.” Patricia Geldbach, Director of Surgical Services, testified that Hollowood’s remarks were “the talk of the operating room” the day after the news broadcast. Dr. Druck, President of St. Luke’s medical staff, an elected position, told Geldbach “that 90 percent of the physicians in the doctor’s lounge were very angry [and] were very concerned about what this was going to do to the hospital.” Janette Gunn, Patient Care Manager for the labor and delivery department, testified she had never seen an adverse staff reaction so widespread and extreme.

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