April 15, 2026

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Stanford nurses union announces sellout contract for 6,000 healthcare workers

Stanford nurses union announces sellout contract for 6,000 healthcare workers

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Striking Stanford nurses In April, 2022.

On Tuesday, the Committee for Recognition of Nursing Achievement (CRONA) union announced two three-year tentative agreements for the 6,000 nurses at Stanford Health Care (SHC) and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. The TAs were announced in lieu of strike action, despite the mass support among workers to fight for their demands.

The new contract comes at a critical moment. Nurses at Stanford face severe understaffing that makes providing safe patient care increasingly difficult. Many cannot afford to live in the Bay Area, with some reportedly sleeping in their vans between shifts. Meanwhile, Stanford University sits on an endowment of $37 billion.

Nationally, healthcare as a profession is under a full-frontal assault led by the Trump administration and anti-science quack Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who was installed by Trump as the head of Health and Human Services (HHS). The firing of 10,000 public health workers at HHS, along with a further 10,000 who were railroaded into accepting early retirement, is part of a broader campaign to dismantle health services in the US, giving way for the ongoing coronavirus pandemic to continue to kill thousands each week and to allow for even more dangerous pathogens, like the H5N1 bird flu to further cement themselves in humans.

The contract negotiations cannot be separated from Stanford University’s broader role in promoting junk science. Figures like Jay Bhattacharya and Scott Atlas, who held positions at Stanford, were key architects of the “Great Barrington Declaration,” which opposed lockdowns and other public health measures needed to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Above all, the tentative agreements underscore the need for workers to organize themselves independently in defense of jobs and public health. The trade union bureaucracies have repeatedly demonstrated that they either refuse to fight these attacks on workers, or in the case of UAW President Sean Fain and Teamsters President Sean O’Brien, working alongside the Democratic Party and actively collaborating with Trump.

The agreements presented to the Bay Area nurses are another example of this fecklessness. One of the “highlights” of both contracts are wage increases of 4 percent over the next three years. In reality, such wage increases fall well short of inflation over the past three years, much less the skyrocketing of costs of living that will emerge from Trump’s trade war measures.

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