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Three U.S. nursing unions merge

By Richard Pizzi

In a move to unite the power and influence of major U.S. nursing unions, the United American Nurses, California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee, and the Massachusetts Nurses Association are joining together to form a new, 150,000-member association.

The new organization will be called the United American Nurses-National Nurses Organizing Committee, UAN-NNOC, and will be affiliated with the AFL-CIO.

"Under the principle that RNs should be represented by an RN union," the three unions declared in a joint statement, "we resolve to create a new union of staff nurse-led organizations named UAN-NNOC."

The goals of the new organization include:

  • Build an RN movement in order to defend and advance the interests of direct care nurses across the country;

  • Organize all non-union direct care RNs (a substantial majority of the budget shall be dedicated to new organizing);

  • Provide a powerful national voice for RN rights, safe RN practice, including RN-to-patient staffing ratios under the principle that safe staffing saves lives, and healthcare justice;

  • Provide a vehicle for solidarity with sister nurse and allied organizations around the world; 

  • Create a national Taft-Hartley pension for union RNs.