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Remembering the Importance of Labor Day

Labor Day is often thought of as the unofficial end of summer, the start of the school year in Washington, and a time to gather with friends and family. While those traditions matter, the true meaning of Labor Day is about honoring the workers whose labor sustains this country.

It is the collective effort of workers, our physical and mental contributions, that drives the economy. Without workers, nothing moves forward. Without unions, those workers are left at the mercy of corporate interests.

Because of organized labor, we have the 40-hour workweek, weekends, paid time off, higher wages, safer working conditions, access to healthcare, and the end of child labor. Washington nurses know this firsthand: we have some of the strongest wages and protections in the nation because of union strength. These gains do not only benefit union members but raise standards for all workers.

None of this was freely given. It was won through struggle, and often at great cost. Workers lost their lives in tragedies like the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, and many faced violence for demanding safe workplaces and fair pay. Labor Day is a reminder of those sacrifices and a call to protect what has been won.

Labor Rights Under Renewed Attack

Support for unions in America is higher than it has been in decades, with 70 percent of the public viewing unions favorably (Gallup, 2024). Yet at the very moment unions are gaining strength, labor rights are facing historic challenges.

This week, the National Labor Relations Board, the institution created in the 1930s to protect workers’ rights, was declared unconstitutional. Board members have been dismissed without cause, leaving too few to enforce labor law. Federal unions, including those in the VA, have been stripped away by executive action.

These attacks are not about party politics. They are about power, and whether working people will continue to have a voice on the job.

That is why WSNA and our parent union, the American Federation of Teachers, are supporting protests across the country this Labor Day. We invite you to join one near you. Visit https://workerslaborday.org/#find-an-event to find a protest or join the Workers Over Billionaires protest in Tacoma this Labor Day from 1000-1200 on the I-5 pedestrian overpass at South Hosmer and South 37th St.

At Tacoma General We Have Our Own Labor Fight Coming Up

We are less than two weeks out from our first bargaining prep session, and there are still plenty of nurses who have not completed the bargaining survey. We need it be filled out as soon as possible so we can best prepare to fight for the contract that you want and deserve. Please take a moment to fill out the pre-negotiation survey today by following the link below

Together, we honor the past and fight for the future.

In Solidarity,
Therese Juntunen, NTICU
Michelle Stevenson, 5/6 MSICU/PCU
Sarah Huber, Emergency Department
Christina Nicholson, Resource RN
George Murray, NTICU
Marc Jebousek, Emergency Department
Anna Vermaire, Pulse Cardiac Short Stay
Anna Glorioso-Kaufmann, Operating Room
Jaime Cary, Labor and Delivery
Rachel Ballou-Church, Medical Oncology

Questions? Contact one of your officers, one of your bargaining team members, or Nurse Rep Jared Richardson (jrichardson@wsna.org).