News

May 29th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

SSU + VFNHP: Common Good Bargaining!

Earlier this week, Support Staff United (SSU) and the Technical Professionals of Vermont Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals (VFNHP) introduced their “Common Good” proposals in contract bargaining that would make our hospitals and communities safer for everyone who wants to call Vermont home.

As part of this work, they stood with Migrant Justice and SEIU-CIR, the union that represents resident doctors at UVMMC, at a press conference to call on UVM Medical Center to create greater protections for all employees and patients, and to join the Milk with Dignity program so all milk purchased by the hospital comes from farms where basic human rights are protected.

Our communities need a strong labor movement to thrive, and our union needs strong community support to thrive – Common Good bargaining does precisely that.

You can read all of the Common Good contract proposals & add your name to the support letter here.

PFNHP successfully grieved a drastic reduction in pay imposed on a bargaining unit member moving to a new shift and position. They have had their pay restored to the appropriate level and step for their experience after a fruitful Step One meeting! 

May 15th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Win for Brattleboro Healthcare United!

After more than a year of bargaining, 280 support staff and technical workers at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital (BMH), represented by Brattleboro Healthcare United (BHU), have ratified their first union contract! 

Workers won:

  • a minimum pay rate of $18 immediately and at least $19 in October 2026
  • a new wage scale that recognizes experience and preserves existing differentials while adding new pay for per diem work, floating, training, and precepting
  • a fair disciplinary process
  • stronger health and safety protections, including a staffed metal detector and protections around unsafe assignments.

“This contract represents a huge amount of work from BHU members across the hospital who stayed committed through a long bargaining process,” said Kelsey Bean, a BMH Phlebotomist and a member of the BHU bargaining team. “We’re excited to finally have a first contract in place and to get back to what we do best; providing excellent patient care for our community. We’re looking forward to moving ahead and continuing to work with BMH administration.”

May 8th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Northwestern Healthcare United Wins First Contract!

After over 14 months, 27 bargaining sessions, 6 community events, 250 lawn signs, and countless late night prep meetings, Nurses at Northwestern Medical Center have ratified their first contract! Because they came together, stood up for themselves they achieved …  

  • A wage scale based on years of experience that supports the retention of newer nurses

  • Urgent pay (2x hourly pay for urgent shifts)

  • Just Cause discipline and termination protections

  • Transparent scheduling practices

  • Starting wages of $36/hour for inpatient RNs and $34/hour for clinic RNs ($3/hr increase)

  • A cap on how often a nurse can be floated

  • Protections for RNs in surgical services if management tries to eliminate nightcall positions

  • A ban on mandatory overtime 

and much more!

-> See here a full list of contract wins

May 1st, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

On Thursday night, AFT Vermont leaders spoke at the House Health Care committee’s hearing on access to primary care.

Sebastion Lury, AFT Vermont’s President for Higher Education and co-president of VSCUP, spoke about how the lack of access to affordable care affects Vermonters.

“One of the most common needs identified at the bargaining tables across the state is access to affordable healthcare. It is a driving factor of all economic issues.”

“In my union roles, in my role as an employee at the Vermont State College system, and as a citizen of Vermont, I know and I see the myriad of Vermonters who live paycheck to paycheck, who put off needed care because they have to choose where to spend their money, who are one bad injury or illness from losing everything they’ve worked for.”

“Ensuring access to affordable healthcare would give Vermonters the financial freedom and flexibility that would improve the lives and livelihoods of individuals, families, businesses, local communities, and the State of Vermont.”

You can watch Sebasion’s full testimony here.

 

Jacob Berkowitz, President of UVMMC Support Staff United, and Nicole DiVita, AFT Vermont’s President for Healthcare and President of VFNHP, zoomed in to give testimony from their joint bargaining session with UVM Medical Center. 

Jacob first spoke about the state of Vermont’s healthcare system and how workers and patients are failed by it.

“Our employer, UVM Health, along with the now defunct OneCare Vermont, have played an enormous role in structuring the healthcare system in Vermont, and it’s no surprise that in a for-profit system they have prioritized costly procedures over preventative care and driven revenues into administrative waste, executive salaries, and propping up less viable facilities in New York State.”

“Vermont is now the most expensive place to receive healthcare in the world, but that money does not make it to us as healthcare workers, nor does it even necessarily translate to more quality patient care. Instead, we’re trapped in a downward cycle.”

 

Nicole followed, emphasizing the crisis that we’re currently facing and  the overwhelming popularity of a universal, publicly funded healthcare system.

“We know healthcare access in Vermont is a crisis. It’s not a debate or a surprise. The question is what we’re willing to do about it.”

“We’re fighting for a better system because the status quo is a crisis for us as healthcare workers when the hospital budget is being balanced on our backs. It’s a crisis for our patients who aren’t receiving the care they deserve. It’s a crisis for our teachers and our schools whose budgets are skyrocketing due to healthcare costs. It’s a crisis for the uninsured, who are too afraid of medical debt to receive the care they need. “

“The 2026 Vermont poll found that 73% of Vermonters support a universal, publicly funded healthcare system. Only 10% were opposed. Amongst our members, 98% believe that healthcare is a human right. Universal healthcare is what Vermonters want.”

You can watch Jacob and Nicole’s full testimony here.

April 24th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Last Thursday, UVMMC Support Staff United and Vermont Federation of Nurses and Healthcare Professionals Tech unit had their first joint bargaining session with UVM Medical Center management. Over 500 techs and support staff joined to watch and support the bargaining team.

Members arrived energized, prepared, and motivated to show management they can and will achieve a fair and equitable contract for everyone. Some key takeaways include: 

  • An agreement on Ground Rules, which included the extension of the Tech contract to align with the SSU contract and agreement on bargaining dates through June. 
  • SSU and VFNHP members put six non-financial proposals on the table. Management did not arrive with any proposals, nor did they have any responses to the Unions’ proposals. These proposals included changes to the following articles: 
    • Floating
    • Discipline & Discharge
    • Job Security
    • Health & Safety
    • Non-Discrimination
    • Per-Diem Employment
  • A discussion of  “common good” proposals, which will build worker power by bringing in community members and organizations who align with goals in the SSU and VFNHP contracts that benefit everyone. 

The next bargaining session will be on Thursday, April 30 at 5pm.

Huge Win at Rutland Regional Medical Center! On April 8th and 9th, after more than a year of organizing, a strong majority of Support Staff and Technical Professionals at RRMC voted in two separate, simultaneous elections to formalize their union, Rutland Healthcare Workers United!

Workers faced a strong anti-union campaign from hospital management, but the RHWU organizing committee worked hard and overcame every obstacle put in their way. Election results showed technical professionals supporting the union effort 172-147 with 85% voter turnout, and support staff supporting 228-167 with 80% turnout.


“Our union has been flourishing for many months and yesterday we formalized it through an overwhelming victory,” said Heather Ikerd, Unit Secretary and RHWU organizing committee member. “We know that everyone benefits when our healthcare workers are safe and supported. We’ll continue engaging our colleagues to make improvements that benefit our patients, coworkers, and Rutland County.”

Congratulations to the workers at RRMC!

Writing on the Hall: Union yes
Rutland Herald
April 10th, 2026


RRMC Tech And Support Staff Vote To Unionize
Mountain Times
April 15th, 2026 

April 10th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

The Brattleboro Federation of Nurses is excited to announce that their tentative agreement has been overwhelmingly ratified, with 99% voting YES! This victory is the result of the strength, solidarity, and determination of every nurse at BMH.

Together, they secured an agreement that protects what matters most, including:

  • No cuts to differentials
  • No expansion of floating (status quo maintained)
  • Hospital contributions to retirement
  • Benefits remain protected
  • Protects union rights while affirming the value workers bring to their hospital and community

They are holding the line on the standards they’ve fought for and ensuring that Brattleboro Memorial Hospital remains a place where nurses can build lasting careers and deliver the high-quality care their community deserves.

March 27th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

CVHU has won several grievances in the past month, most of which were resolved at Step 1 or 2 without the need for advancing to step 3.

  • An ED Tech won the wage increase she deserved after advocating for herself and persisting despite the initial partial increase offered.
  • When an LNA/MHT’s usual shift was going to be denied because it would create overtime in her pay period (she was also teaching AVADE trainings that week), she used her contract to win her shift back immediately
  • An Orthopedic RN was being disciplined for attendance despite previous verbal agreements with her supervisor regarding the differing school schedules, locations, and transportation needs of her three children. Ashley grieved the discipline and won, on an unprecedentedly short timeline.
  • Staff in the Nutrition and Food Service department at CVMC quickly organized and won their grievance regarding scheduling CTO. 
  • Nurses working at Woodridge Rehabilitation and Nursing Home were asked to float and take a full assignment on a different floor before completing adequate orientation. They said no and immediately won their grievance.
  • An Emergency Department RN was denied her SIP differential (scheduled incentive pay) for the time she worked a SIP shift. WHen she grieved it, she won that pay correction.
  • An Emergency Department RN was downstaffed out of turn (there were travelers working that should have been downstaffed first), and when she grieved it, she won backpay for the day of work she missed.

Through mismanagement, the Brattleboro Memorial Hospital (BMH) administration has dug a $14 million hole and is now asking nurses, frontline healthcare workers, and low paid workers to bear the brunt of the economic pain.

Management is proposing for nurses, frontline and low paid workers:

  • No wage increases for three years
  • Cuts to differentials (these only affect frontline healthcare workers)
  • A 4% reduction of retirement contributions
  • Forcing spouses off of family insurance and other cuts to healthcare
  • Cuts to paid time off
  • Cuts to union rights

These proposals are causing high quality nurses and health care professionals to leave now. We believe that if they are implemented, it will create a downward spiral that could lead to the closure of BMH.

Over 80% of nurses at BMH have committed to going on strike if management continues to make these proposals.

Click here to add your support for nurses and frontline healthcare workers at BMH and to save our community hospital

March 6th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Last Friday, Sophia Simkins, primary care nurse and VP of Political Education for VFNHP, testified about the dangers of unregulated AI use in Healthcare before the House Health Care committee.

“AI is entering healthcare rapidly with little input from direct care providers or, more importantly, from our patients. For example, UVMMC is working on implementing an AI remote patient monitoring program that is relatively untested… It raises questions about who is held responsible when a patient is harmed. There has not been adequate safety research to show that this is equivalent to standard practice.

Sophia also advocated for adding a RN to the already established Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council.

“Nurses are in a unique position to advise on the risks and benefits of proposed implementation of AI as we directly provide the patient care and are able to evaluate the risks and benefits.”

You can watch Sophia’s full testimony here.

February 27th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

On Thursday, AFT Vermont held our annual Legislative Action Day. Dozens of members from across the state gathered at the State House in Montpelier to advocate for our shared legislative priorities.

Union members advocated for the issues that they care about to their legislators, including

  • Universal Healthcare
  • Shared Governance at UVM and VSC
  • The right to strike for public higher education workers
  • Requiring hospitals to abide by the same open meeting rules that public entities follow
  • Taxing the rich (recouping some/all of the Federal tax cuts for the wealthy)

A shout out to everyone who joined us yesterday and helped make the day successful! 

Our advocacy doesn’t end with our legislative action day; keep an eye out for future political action opportunities, or reach out to lisa.gerlach@aftvermont.org to learn about ways to exercise the power of our Union in the state house.

February 20th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Last week, UVM Staff United Co-President gave testimony in support of S.292, a bill that would lift the prohibition on public higher education workers from going on strike.

“To be clear: in supporting this bill, we are not expressing our desire to strike. No union member wants to strike. It carries risks and requires tremendous work on the part of a union and its members. Striking requires 90% of the membership to vote yes. It is not a tool used lightly.

What having the right to strike does is to level the playing field at the bargaining table. We know that when management understands that workers can withhold our labor, there is incentive for them to bargain in good faith.

We are asking to lift the prohibition and extend to Vermont higher ed workers the same protections and rights that other unions have, notably including k-12 workers in Vermont. And we wouldn’t be alone: Public higher education workers in 11 other states have the legal right to strike.”

Click here to watch Ellen’s testimony.

Earlier this week, Hospice United voted 99% in favor of ratifying their first union contract!

Hospice United workers voted to form their union last June and have been hard at work bargaining their first contract ever since. UVM Hospice is split into the McClure Miller Respite house in Colchester and the community team, who care for hospice patients in their homes. Through the bargaining process, union members have learned to appreciate and respect the work of the entire team even more and built relationships and solidarity across the unit.

 

Their contract incudes:

  • A transparent wage scale, with average 17% increases over 2.5 years.
  • New preceptor and per diem differentials, and increased differentials across the board
  • Weekend work protections for family services.
  • A staffing committee to create guidelines at the Respite House to be created within 90 days
  • Just cause and job security protections 
  • Duration: Expires 3/31/28, which is within a month of the CVHU Support Staff expiration and would allow the member to join the call for a general strike on May Day 2028 if necessary. 
  • Election Procedure Agreement: establishes protections for the rest of UVM Home Health should they choose to organize

And MORE! Read the full TA summary here

February 6th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

AFT Vermont Members Participate in ICE OUT protests

Last week, in the wake of the murder of Union member and nurse Alex Pretti, the murder of Renee Good, and the increase in ICE activity nationally, thousands of Vermonters took to the streets in protest. Among them, AFT Vermont Union members stood loud and proud.

January 23rd, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

Last Thursday, two AFT Vermont members gave testimony in the House Human Services committee about the impact cuts to emergency housing have had on our hospital Emergency Departments.

Kristen Bond-Watts, Emergency Department Nurse at Porter Hospital in Middlebury, highlighted the gravity of the situation:

“It doesn’t feel right to turn someone away who has nowhere to go. But our ER waiting room isn’t designed to be a shelter. People waiting there are exposed to contagious illnesses. Families are there during some of the most difficult moments of their lives.

Recently, we had a patient spent three days in our single psychiatry-equipped room, only to reveal that their suicidal thoughts would resolve if someone could fix their broken pipes at home. Our nurses spent hours trying to connect them with resources.”

Click here to watch Kristen’s full testimony.

Amanda Meltsner, Patient Access Navigator for the Emergency Department at UVMMC, echoed Kristen’s concerns and highlighted the high cost of using Emergency Departments as shelters.

“Quite a number, I would say a large majority of the people who are unhoused, are either on medicaid, medicare, both medicaid and medicare, VA insurance, or they are just uninsured. Which means all of those visits that they are taking to our emergency department, essentially to see a doctor in order to get the OK to sleep in our department overnight…. We’re billing medicare and medicaid for those doctor hours, for those visits, for somebody to sleep in the ED. Which is not a very good use of the tax dollars we have for those people. Those dollars could be better spent in other ways.”

Click here to watch Amanda’s full testimony.

AFT Vermont members will continue to advocate for funding for emergency shelters so that we can take some of the pressure off of our Emergency Departments and ensure that our unhoused neighbors can have a safe, dedicated place to shelter from the elements.

 

Interested in adding your voice to this conversation? Please email lisa.gerlach@aftvermont.org 

January 16th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

PFNHP Progressive Discipline wins!

Stewards from PFNHP, the Union representing Nurses, Techs, and Support Staff at Porter Hospital, have organized and won several unfair disciplines this month!

Brian, Helen Porter LNA: Stewards were able to successfully grieve Brian’s unjust termination.Brian will be returning to work on 1/12/26. He will be working his same shift in a different unit with: no at-will probationary period, full back pay with differentials, full CTO and EIR accrual, reinstatement of his health benefits, and the final installment of his signing bonus. We are excited to welcome Brian back to work.

Justin, EVS worker: After management indicated their intent to terminate Justin (after placing him on Admin Leave on the same day he received his final written warning), stewards and Justin filed a Step 3 Grievance against his final written warning. Stewards then rejected an Last Chance Agreement (LCA) offer from management that would have left Justin with no recourse if he were terminated. Management did not pursue termination and are now in the process of working with Justin, EAP, PFNHP, and HR to help him prepare for a successful return to work. The Step 3 Grievance meeting contesting the final written warning is scheduled.

Amber, Laundry: By working with Amber’s co-workers and carefully documenting their testimony, Amber and her stewards were able to remove an unwarranted documented verbal warning for an alleged code of conduct violation.

January 9th, 2026 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

AFT Vermont Members Deliver Political Action to Legislators

This past fall, AFT Vermont members asked their fellow Union members to sign a card to their state Representatives and Senators endorsing our legislative platform, a platform that was written and approved by our membership. Workers from each of our established local affiliate unions took it upon themselves to talk with their coworkers about our legislative priorities and collect signatures. Members in nearly every legislative district around the state decided to take action to let their Representatives know that healthcare and higher education are human rights, and that we want our elected officials to take our concerns seriously this legislative session.

On January 8th, a few AFT Vermont members gathered in the State House to deliver the results of this action to Representatives and Senators. We hand-delivered most legislators a stack of cards from their constituents and had conversations with them about our Union and our priorities for this legislative session. Our message to Montpelier was loud and clear: AFT Vermont members are engaged in the legislative process and willing to take action on the issues that we care about.

We’re looking forward to continuing our advocacy for legislation that will improve our working conditions and make healthcare and higher education more accessible and affordable for everyone, including:

  • The right to strike for public higher education workers
  • Making hospital boards more transparent by making them adhere to open meeting laws
  • Shared governance on the UVM and VSC Board of Trustees
  • Funding for Community Health Centers, Planned Parenthood, and our State Colleges

United Academics Pay Discrepancy Win!

 

For Academic Year 2024-2025,three faculty in UVM’s College of Nursing and Health Sciences who had been paid below the minimum salary for their rank. The underpayments ranged from (roughly) $500 to $3,500 for the year. 

For Academic Year 2025-2026 (the current fiscal year), there were again three faculty in CNHS who are being paid below the minimum salary for their rank.  The underpayments ranged from (roughly) $900 to $11,500 for the year.

Joe Kurdle, UA Treasurer with a keen financial eye, noticed these discrepancies, and brought it to the attention of UAs Contract Administration Committee. Ingird Nelson brought this issue up in UAs regular Labor Management meetings and after review from the Administration, this discrepancy was rectified and the members will be paid in full!

December 12th, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter 

AFT VERMONT IN THE NEWS

More employees unionize at Porter Medical Center
Vermont Public, by Lola Duffort
December 10th, 2025

About 80 health professionals at Porter Medical Center in Middlebury will form a union with AFT-Vermont after voting 53-12 in favor of unionization Tuesday.

The union elections this week follow a remarkably successful string of unionization efforts across Vermont’s health care sector in recent years, including at Porter, at the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington and the Central Vermont Medical Center in Berlin.

AFT-Vermont now represents more than 12,000 workers in health care and higher education, according to Nicole DiVita, a certified ophthalmic technician at the University of Vermont Medical Center and AFT’s president for health care. The union’s rolls have roughly doubled in the last five to six years, she said, in part because of the enormous stress health care has been under since the COVID-19 pandemic.

In early July, UVM launched a Dependents Audit, requiring employees–by September 5–to upload birth certificates, marriage licenses, adoption papers to WTW – a third-party, multinational company, with the goal of removing healthcare coverage for so-called ineligible family members, to save money for the university. 

UVMSU members immediately understood the danger of surrendering sensitive personal documents in a time when the federal government is targeting workers and students who are immigrants and who are queer. It also felt an awful lot like what the federal administration is doing: making unfounded accusations of waste, fraud, and abuse, asking for our papers, and targeting DEI work, so, together with United Academics and UE Local 267, we fought back.

Over the course of several months, UVMSU members, alongside UA and UE 267, organized around this issue. When the UVM administration refused to bargain the terms of the audit with us, we turned to people power. Our members ramped up the pressure on the administration, most importantly by delaying their compliance with the audit, and subsequently marching on HR and the President’s office, to call for her to pause the audit and negotiate. 

Less than a week later, the University capitulated by announcing two major changes to the audit. First, UVM agreed to direct WTW to delete all UVM data immediately after the end of the audit. And they agreed to allow employees to verify their dependents directly with UVM HR.. While we had consistently advocated for the past practice of attestation, rather than a third–party audit, winning these changes showed that even when our right to bargain is denied, we can force our employer to change course through collective pressure. 

November 21st, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

UVMMC Support Staff United Float Differential Win:

Medical Assistants at UVMMC Orthopedics and Rehab were offered a float differential in writing by their supervisor to assist at another clinic. The union members took their supervisor at her word and agreed to float. When they got their paychecks, there was no float differential, and they were made aware that there is no float differential for Medical Assistants in their contract. Support Staff United Grievance Chair Betsy Brown assisted the members in filing a grievance anyways because management had offered the pay in writing. UVMMC agreed to pay the Medical Assistants the money they were promised for those shifts!

AFT Vermont Field Rep/Organizer María Sepúlveda provided support on this grievance

November 7th, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

CVMC Nurse/Tech Union Wins 9 Grievances Slated for Arbitration

Earlier this year, Central Vermont Healthcare United (CVHU) filed for arbitration on 10 separate grievances. Before these arbitration hearings happened, CVHU was able to negotiate a settlement with CVMC management on 9 of the 10 issues. This avoided using tens of thousands of dollars in the arbitration process, and CVHU won on nearly all of the issues, including:

  • Returning to the former practice of stacking holiday, incentive, and overtime pay, with the increased rates of pay from their contract – AND backpay for all instances since July 2024
  • Float Pay for ACU & Endoscopy
  • No one can be placed on unpaid administrative leave anymore 
  • Agreement to renegotiate CTO scheduling process and return to former holiday scheduling practice on Medsurg
  • SANE/Forensic nurses will be paid the call-in premium and case stipend 

October 31st, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter

UVMMC Nurses, Techs, and Support Staff Safe Staffing Win

In August leaders from VFNHP and UVMMC-SSU delivered a staffing petition with over 1250 signatures–and over 100 “Concern for Safe Staffing forms” to Nurse management at UVMMC.  Nurses and LNAs spoke to management about their experience of unsafe staffing conditions related to the new staffing policy.

Because members of both unions worked together to file safe staffing forms, grievances, supported the petition, and spoke directly to the hospital management about concerns for safe staffing and high-quality patient care, the hospital has agreed to return to the previous staffing policy

This is a tremendous victory for quality patient care and is due to union members uniting and speaking up for safe staffing for patients and staff. It is also a powerful reminder that your voice changes lives.

October 24th, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter 

Hospice Staff Vote to Form Union

In June, after six months of organizing, a majority of the 85 Hospice staff at UVM Home Health and Hospice voted to formalize their union, and now a representative committee is at the negotiating table and organizing for a fair first contract.

 

Hospice United represents Nurses, LNAs, Social Workers, Chaplains, Bereavement Coordinators, Volunteers Coordinators, Cooks, and Admin Support in both the McClure Miller Respite House and the community-based team. 

 

“We’re doing this to build a better Hospice,” says Lindsay Gagnon, APRN Hospice Nurse Practitioner. “We deserve fair caseloads, so we can give each patient and family the best care possible at the end of life. We deserve fair pay that reflects the highly skilled and specialized care we provide. We deserve respect and a voice, to ensure every team member has what they need to thrive while doing the work we are so passionate about.”

 

With a 88% voting yes, this victory marks the establishment of union representation at every one of UVM Health Network’s seven locations. 

 

“At Hospice, we are an interdisciplinary team that supports patients’ mind, body, and spirit. We’re in the field everyday, solo at times, but never alone – creating a web of care that touches every part of our community. Nobody should be left out; it wouldn’t be Hospice without the whole team,” says Nina Thompson, Chaplain.

 

Nicole DiVita, an Ophthalmic Technician at UVMMC and president for healthcare of AFT Vermont says of this union election, “I am thrilled that Hospice employees now have a real voice in their workplace, and I’m thrilled to welcome them to AFT Vermont. We are the fastest growing union in the state, representing over 11,000 healthcare and higher education professionals, including nurses and health professionals at five Vermont hospitals. In just the last 4 months, over 700 healthcare workers have organized their union and joined AFT Vermont. When healthcare workers have a voice, we raise the standard of care for our whole community.”

 

The organizing committee was assisted by AFT Vermont Field Rep/Organizers Emma Galvin and Nick Brown.

October 17th, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter 

 

Members of Brattleboro Healthcare United (BHU) and the community at the Board of Directors meet at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital

 

BHU Bargaining Team member Joanne Lucas spoke about BMH’s budget, leadership, and multiple unfair labor practice (ULP) charges, including BMH’s illegal firing of Karla Griswold: “It seems the hospital prefers to spend money it doesn’t have to fight a case it already lost, rather than prioritize the financial health of the organization.”

 

Joanne also emphasized “The financial health of BMH is important to its employees and to the community. No one wants to see BMH shuttered. We, the employees of BMH, are hardworking, dedicated individuals who care deeply about our patients and our hospital. We come to work every day to provide the best quality care and services to the people we serve. We are continually asked to do more with less and we do it with the utmost compassion and professionalism.”

 

Members of BHU and the Brattleboro Federation of Nurses have also been meeting with legislators and sharing with them management’s repeated violations of labor law and asking legislators to reach out to management and encourage them to follow the law.

 

Field Rep/Organizers Hailey Escobar and Sarah Shames are supporting BHU in their fight for a fair first contract–and a fair successor contract for BFN.

October 10th, 2025 | AFT Vermont Newsletter 

Arbitrator Rules that UVMMC Violated our Contract: Alexandrea is Reinstated!!!

Alexandrea Montgomery was a remote worker in the Patient Access & Service Center handling inbound calls to specialty clinics at UVMMC, until she was wrongfully terminated in December 2024. She is a single mother, a hard worker and was great at her job. 

In the summer of 2024, UVMMC Management unilaterally changed the schedules of all of the workers in the Patient Access & Service Center from a 30 min to a 1 hour unpaid lunch break. Support Staff United filed a grievance. Alexandrea anticipated the schedule change would be an issue for her in the fall because she is responsible for taking her daughter to school. At the time, her supervisor gave her permission to go on “Not Ready” on the phone system while she did the school drop off. This supervisor left UVMMC and when the manager of the department found out Alexandrea was taking her daughter to school during her shift, she did not believe there was an agreement with the prior supervisor and fired Alexandrea. Support Staff United filed a grievance, which UVMMC denied, and union leadership voted to take the case to arbitration. 

At the arbitration hearing, Alexandrea did an excellent job testifying truthfully to support her case that she had not committed “serious gross misconduct” as alleged by UVMMC. Management’s witnesses, on the other hand, would not answer simple yes or no questions about the case and ultimately the arbitrator found them to be a “less reliable witness” than Alexandrea. It was clear that progressive discipline was not followed. 

Three months after the hearing, we got the news that WE WON: Alexandrea is eligible for reinstatement and to be made whole for all financial losses as a result of the termination. We are excited to welcome Alexandrea back as a union member and that our first arbitration was a success.