The New South Wales Nurses and Midwives Association (NSWNMA) leadership election in October will be the first to be openly contested since 2003.
Brett Holmes, who was elected general secretary in August 2002, retired in August. A day before his retirement, the NSWNMA Council had elected assistant general secretary Shaye Candish his successor.
Michael Whaites, director of strategy, projects and transformation, was elected by the council as the new assistant general secretary.
The new leadership appointed a non-nurse as the new director of strategy and transformation.
The NSWNMA did not notify聽its 75,000 members that nominations had opened from September 1 and delegates were only informed of the election 48 hours before nominations closed.
The process is similar to what transpired in the Western Australian branch of the Australian Nursing Federation (WA ANF). Mark Olson, WA ANF聽secretary for the past 24 years, announced his retirement earlier this year and Janet Reah, a state councillor, was parachuted into the newly-constructed assistant secretary position.
A progressive ticket, titled , has formed to contest the NSW election. It is fielding NSWNMA member John-Paul Marx for assistant general secretary and Rachel Hughes, Amit Gupta and聽Thuy-An Le for councillor positions.
Marx said: 鈥淭his election should be a wake-up call for NSW nurses and midwives to examine how our union could foster inclusivity, openness, collaboration, diversity, democracy, transparency聽and accountability.鈥 A Smarter Union team is campaigning for a cap on the maximum number of sequential terms in office that union leaders can serve.
Last year, the NSWNMA created two director positions, costing more than聽$320,000 a year. A Smarter Union said that if it wins it will devote resources to better support members when they need help. 鈥淲e will change our expensive corporate-like structures and spend that money on our membership services instead.鈥
The team is also campaigning to establish a 鈥渟olidarity fund鈥 to provide support to members during industrial action to win safe staffing ratios and fair pay.
Meanwhile, after abruptly dumped its 2019 election commitment to mandated nurse-to-patient ratios, it announced its revised health policy for the NSW election on September 21.
The NSWNMA leadership stood behind Labor leader Chris Minns as he said Labor鈥檚 policy was for minimum and enforceable safe staffing levels in public hospitals, with an initial focus on emergency departments.
The union鈥檚 support for Minns鈥 policy was not discussed with the wider union membership or its Committee of Delegates that had convened the previous night.
The NSW Labor policy does not cover paediatric and mental health critical care, paediatrics, neo-natal intensive care, perioperative services, community mental health, short stay wards, drug and alcohol, outpatient clinics or Specials and聽Clinical Nurse and Midwifery Educators.
Comments on the 聽page a week later indicate that聽members are yet to be fully briefed on Labor鈥檚 policy. As one nurse wrote: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the difference between NSW ALP鈥檚 鈥渟afe staffing commitment鈥 and 鈥渓egislated ratios?鈥
Marx told 麻豆传媒 that improved staffing was a step in the right direction but that 鈥渋t is not mandated ratios鈥. He added that nurse-to-patient ratios has been a 鈥渓ong-running campaign鈥 and that Labor鈥檚 new policy is 鈥渁 backward step鈥 for nurses and midwives and the public health sector.
[Niko Leka was a long-time member of the NSW Nurses and Midwives Union.]