On this date in 1999, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that medical interns could unionize and negotiate both their wages and working hours. Another decision, made just prior by the California Public Employment Relations Board, further opened the way for unionization.
The NLRB decision was based on a dispute between interns and residents at Boston University’s medical education center. The decision recognized the interns as employees, not students, guaranteeing them all rights given to other workers.
Bruce Elwell, with the Committee of Interns and Residents, said at the time that the decision would affect about 50,000 interns in the private sector. The PERB decision affected about 3,300 doctors-in-training at University of California teaching institutions.
Photo via Madison Guy // CC 2.0.
MOST POPULAR TODAY
Zionist organizations leading campaign to stop ceasefire resolutions in D.C. area
High Court essentially bans demonstrations, freedom of assembly in Deep South
Communist Karol Cariola elected president of Chile’s legislature
Afghanistan’s socialist years: The promising future killed off by U.S. imperialism
Comments