The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 3 years ago

‘Amber-Jade, give us a raise’: WA nurses march on health minister’s office in major strike

Hamish Hastie, Jesinta Burton, Daile Cross and Cameron Myles
Updated ,first published

That’s a wrap

By Hamish Hastie

That concludes our live coverage of the nurses’ and midwives’ strike. Thank you for reading.

As mentioned previously WAtoday estimated between 3000 and 4000 people attended the rally at Parliament House and Dumas House making it the biggest rally of its kind by the ANF in WA history.

Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson’s office was contacted for further comment following the rally but declined to add anything new to the statement she released earlier today.

The strike remains in place until 9pm but WA hired agency nurses and called in staff with clinical qualifications to fill gaps on hospital wards.

Information is still scant on how the strike has impacted patient care in hospitals.

Angry nurses have their say

By Hamish Hastie

King Edward Memorial Hospital midwife Kristy Woodleigh was considering leaving her profession a year ago but the sight of a sea of striking nurses at Parliament House today has re-energised her.

Woodleigh was one of thousands of nurses and midwives at the Australian Nursing Federation WA who marched at a rally in Perth to vent her frustration at the government’s handling of the health system and pay negotiations over the past year.

Nurses and midwives turned up to the rally in their thousands. Jesmine Cheong

“I will stay in the profession because I think this is really uplifting,” she said.

“I believe this is going to mean that we’re going to get change.”

Rally wraps up

By Hamish Hastie

The rally has now finished with nurses filing back onto Horizons West buses and back into the city.

WAtoday estimates between 3000 and 4000 nurses and midwives attended the rally.

As she previously flagged, Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson did not address the angry crowd outside Dumas House.

Below are some shots from the rally.

ANF WA secretary Janet Reah addresses the rally at Parliament House.Hamish Hastie
Advertisement

‘Amber-Jade, give us a raise’

By Hamish Hastie

Nurses chanted “Amber-Jade, give us a raise” as they marched to the health minister’s office at Dumas House.

ANFWA secretary Janet Reah declared “we are making history today”.

“This is the highest gathering of nurses and midwives in Western Australian history,” she told the crowd.

WA nurses march on government offices at Dumas House in Perth. Hamish Hastie

“If this government continues to ignore us this will be the last gathering … because we’re all going to leave.”

About 400 surgeries rescheduled

By Hamish Hastie

Around 400 surgeries, including possibly some Category 1 surgeries, will be rescheduled due to the nurses strike today.

Category 1 surgeries are considered urgent, where there is the potential for a patient to deteriorate quickly to the point where it may become an emergency.

“On any given day there are around 650 surgeries performed across the WA Health system,” a health spokesperson said.

Nurses heading to the rally. Harriet Flinn

“Most – around 400 – are Category 2 and 3 surgeries many of which have had to be rescheduled.

‘This is about future-proofing our health system’: ANFWA secretary

By Jesinta Burton

Before the rally decamped to Dumas House, Reah painted a bleak picture of the state’s health care system, warning recruitment issues would only worsen if the state did not consider offering more competitive wages.

“We’ve had massive problems recruiting staff,” she said.

“This government has not enabled a safe environment for nurses and midwives and their patients for over two years.

“We have record levels of ambulance ramping, and elective surgery lists have blown out.

“This is about future-proofing our health system with a competitive wage that can attract nurses and midwives from other jurisdictions.

“The government has given us ratios but without a competitive salary, we won’t be able to implement the ratios easily.”

Advertisement

Nurses head for health minister’s office

By Hamish Hastie

The rally is now gearing up to walk the 400 metres to Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson’s office at Dumas House.

Premier Mark McGowan is in Collie today while Sanderson has previously said she would not address the crowd, describing the calls for her to speak as a “stunt”.

Clever placards get the message across. Harriet Flinn

One nurse fainted during the rally with several members of the rally jokingly asking whether there was a nurse in the crowd.

Reah signed off by saying the government needed to improve its offer or risk nurses and midwives leaving the system.

ANFWA vice president says nurses rallied at great personal cost

By Hamish Hastie

ANFWA senior vice president and senior Sir Charles Gairdner nurse Loreta Murphy has given an impassioned speech to the rowdy crowd.

She said the nurses and midwives had travelled to the rally at great personal cost.

“It’s because we care that we have taken these extraordinary steps,” she said.

“My heart is swollen today. I applaud all of you.

“This is not an easy choice. But for some reason this government just doesn’t care about the backbone of its health system.”

The union is now reading out all the nominees of the now-cancelled nursing and midwifery awards.

WAtoday’s Hamish Hastie is on the front line

By

WAtoday political reporter Hamish Hastie gives a rundown of today’s strike action from the front line of the protest. Watch his video below.

Loading

Advertisement

‘What a crock’: Reah takes aim at government, IRC

By Hamish Hastie

Reah is now criticising the government and Industrial Relations Commission for their actions in the lead-up to the rally.

To thousands of jeers, she decried the IRC’s warning that it would penalise transport operators for picking up nurses and taking them to the rally.

She also blasted a decision by WA Health to cancel the Nursing and Midwifery awards scheduled for tonight.

Loading

“The cherry on top was the announcement last night of the cancellation of the nursing and midwifery awards night that was tonight,” she said.

“The reason cited was patient safety, what a crock.”

Advertisement