In the Illawarra region, more than 100 nurses marched through the main streets of Shellharbour on 1 September despite pressure from some managers not to join the strike.
Secretary of the NSWNMA branch at Shellharbour Hospital, Debbi Simpson, said the higher-than-expected turnout showed local support for the union’s ratios campaign had strengthened.
“Everyone is overworked and burnt out, and there’s more violence at work as a result of understaffing and care being delayed,” she said.
“A lot of patients need one-on-one care and we just don’t have the staff to give it.
“People recognise that ratios are the only solution.”
“Nurses and midwives don’t need applause – we need safe staffing. Ratios save lives” declared a placard carried by one marcher.
Debbi said pressure from some managers had caused a few nurses to withdraw from strike action.
“Some nurses were made to feel guilty about their patient load and reluctantly decided to work, but generally speaking, everyone’s had enough – even non-union members.
“We’ve had a few people join the union since the strike.”
The march in Shellharbour was the first of this year’s strike demonstrations to be held locally.
Previously, Shellharbour nurses travelled to rallies in Sydney and Wollongong.
“The Sydney rally at Parliament House was amazing and empowering, and Wollongong was good too,” Debbi said.
“This time around we decided to get more community awareness and involvement around our own hospital, which is struggling.”
Nurses told WIN TV News that strikes would continue until the government listened to nurses.
Shellharbour NSWNMA steward Nadia Rodriguez said: “Every time we strike it gets bigger and bigger. Nurses are just getting more and more angry. Today shows that.”
NSWNMA delegate Glenn Hayes, from the Illawarra mental health branch, told WIN News: “We’ve got people who are genuinely traumatised not being able to provide the care they want to provide to people. It’s horrible.”