SHARE Digest: A Win against MGB, Readying for Negotiations & Survey Results, and More!

SHARE Retention Survey

The Results Are In

SHARE’s contract agreement with UMass Memorial expires on October 1, 2022. We will likely begin negotiating with management in early Summer. To prepare, we’re having many conversations to establish our priorities. We’re also analyzing SHARE members’ interests through a series of surveys.

Thank you to the 1150+ of you who responded to the first in the survey series: “Retention, Why People Stay or Leave.” We’ve prepared this report for you to see the results, and to read what your co-workers are saying:

More is on the way. Keep your eyes peeled for surveys about . . .

  • Career development: How do SHARE members want to grow at UMass Memorial? – coming soon

  • Benefits

  • Money, and overall priorities

Your participation matters! Contract negotiations are a time to make our voices heard, fix problems, set a course for the future.


Mass General Brigham Scraps Expansion Plans in Westborough

MARLBOROUGH HOSPITAL SHARE MEMBERS CELEBRATE

Good news came on Friday night in a surprising twist in the saga of the MGB proposal to build three new huge ambulatory centers west of Boston: MGB retracted the proposal. MGB got word that the Department of Public Health was going to deny their application. This is an important development for our community, and comes in part as a result of partnership between SHARE and UMass Memorial advocating to our state legislators to protect healthcare costs and the quality of care in Central Massachusetts.

I am so excited and relieved to hear the news that MGB won’t be opening down the street! People told me ‘they (MGB) are a giant, a monster - you won’t be able to stop them. It’s in the bag - there’s nothing you can do’. Well, all of our hard work meeting, writing, and testifying has paid off! When great people come together and give it their all, they can achieve truly amazing things.
— Taryn Harding, Ultrasound Technologist & SHARE Executive Board Member at Marlborough Hospital

Taryn Harding, pictured here at a SHARE “Smile for a Raise” event supporting contract negotiations at Marlborough Hospital

SHARE Leaders met with legislators to update them about progress on contract negotiations at Marlboro Hospital and to urge them to oppose the MGB expansion.


Free Housing Mediation Services

The Family Services of Central Massachusetts (FSCM) Mediation Department, an Affiliate of Seven Hills Foundation, is a Worcester based Community Mediation Program covering all of Worcester County. Their Housing Mediation Program offers FREE mediation services to landlords and tenants. Learn more . . .

The Results Are In: SHARE Retention Survey

SHARE’s contract agreement with UMass Memorial expires on October 1, 2022. We will likely begin negotiating with management in early Summer. To prepare, we’re having many conversations to establish our priorities. We’re also analyzing SHARE members’ interests through a series of surveys.

Thank you to the 1150 of you who responded to the first in the survey series: “Retention, Why People Stay or Leave.” We’ve prepared this report for you to see the results, and to read what your co-workers are saying:

More is on the way. Keep your eyes peeled for surveys about . . .

  • Career development: How do SHARE members want to grow at UMass Memorial? – coming soon

  • Benefits

  • Money, and overall priorities

Your participation matters! Contract negotiations are a time to make our voices heard, fix problems, set a course for the future.

Free Housing Mediation Services

SHARE recently received the following notice about the useful aid offered by the Family Services of Central Massachusetts Mediation Department:

The Family Services of Central Massachusetts (FSCM) Mediation Department, an Affiliate of Seven Hills Foundation, is a Worcester based Community Mediation Program covering all of Worcester County. Our Housing Mediation Program offers FREE mediation services to landlords and tenants. The pandemic has led to a growing number of eviction cases, and an increase in our homeless population. Part of Governor Baker’s comprehensive Eviction Diversion Initiative is The Massachusetts Housing Mediation Program, a statewide program that uses mediation as a homelessness prevention and housing stability vehicle to help mitigate the human and economic costs of eviction.

FSCM Mediation is voluntary, meaning both landlord and tenant must agree to mediate. FSCM Mediation confidential, meaning anything said in mediation remains with our program and we do not report to anyone with a couple exceptions: if someone says they are going to hurt themselves or someone else, or commit a crime. This is an important distinction because the Housing Court mediation process is not confidential. Court Dispute Resolution Specialists can report “mediation” conversations to the Judge. FSCM Mediators are neutral. We do not take sides, impose solutions, or tell parties what to do. Our Mediators help parties have a conversation to see if they can make their own decisions about moving forward.

FSCM free housing mediation is best utilized prior to OR at the time of Notice to Quit being served upon tenant by landlord and when a case is about to be or is first filed with the Housing Court (called TIER I). The more we can help landlords and tenants get ahead of needing a court process, the more we can help eradicate our community housing crisis, free up court backlog, and preserve family stabilization.

We offer mediation services in both English and Spanish. To learn more about The Family Services of Central Massachusetts (FSCM) Mediation Department, please visit our website: https://www.sevenhills.org/programs/mediation/ 

Mass General Brigham Scraps Expansion Plans in Westborough

Taryn Harding, pictured at a SHARE “Smile for a Raise” event supporting contract negotiations at Marlborough Hospital.

Marlborough Hospital SHARE Members Celebrate

Good news came on Friday night in a surprising twist in the saga of the MGB proposal to build three new huge ambulatory centers west of Boston: MGB retracted the proposal. MGB got word that the Department of Public Health was going to deny their application.

Taryn Harding, Ultrasound Tech and SHARE Executive Board Member at Marlborough Hospital testified in the DPH hearings about the proposed Mass General Brigham expansion in Westborough. Taryn says:

I am so excited and relieved to hear the news that MGB won’t be opening down the street! People told me ‘they (MGB) are a giant, a monster - you won’t be able to stop them. It’s in the bag - there’s nothing you can do’. Well, all of our hard work meeting, writing, and testifying has paid off! When great people come together and give it their all, they can achieve truly amazing things.

Taryn Harding and Courtney DesRosiers pictured delivering a mega Valentine’s Day card to management in support of contract negotiations.

SHARE opposed the plan to open an MGB ambulatory center in Westborough because it threatened SHARE jobs at Marlborough Hospital, and because it would increase the cost of health insurance for SHARE members.

According to Community Advocate: State Sen. Jamie Eldridge [pictured below with SHARE leaders], who has loudly opposed the MGB proposal, promptly celebrated on social media.

‘This was an impressive organizing campaign including the ‘Boroughs legislative delegation, hospital unions, doctors and nurses, and municipal officials, to defeat MGB trying to bring surgical centers to communities including Westborough, that would have increased healthcare costs, and threaten[ed] care for low-income patients,” he wrote. 

“David can beat Goliath!” he added.

Courtney Desrosiers, Ambulatory Services Rep and SHARE Executive Member at Marlborough Hospital puts it this way, “Marlborough Hospital is important to the community. Patients rely on our quality of care, and our caregivers are always striving to improve their experience. Our patients need us to be here for them.”

Read more in The Boston Globe

SHARE Leaders met with legislators to update them about progress on contract negotiations at Marlboro Hospital and to urge them to oppose the MGB expansion.

Kronos Update from SHARE

SHARE continues to meet with hospital leaders about the fixes to the Kronos system . . . and about the corrections for SHARE members’ paychecks. We know that many of you continue to encounter problems with your pay and accrued time.

Here’s what we learned when we met with Sergio Melgar, UMass Memorial’s EVP & CFO, at the end of February:

Payroll still has a lot of work to do to process all of the Kronos discrepancies. They tell us they cannot process all of the problems any faster. They are prioritizing the biggest discrepancies, people who’ve had empty paychecks, and those that have affected lower-paid staff.

Important Things to Know

  • PTO: While Payroll is now fully functional again through Kronos, but the PTO (Paid Time Off) part of Kronos is still broken. UMass Memorial is waiting for a fix from the Kronos company. Fixing PTO blances could take 2-6 months. Hospital leadership will direct managers that it is okay for employees to go negative on their Paid Time Off so that people will be able to take vacations this summer.

  • Get an Advance on your Pay: Do you need money now to pay your bills? You can ask for an advance on your pay. Apply now thru March 11, and get a check the week of March 14th.   Apply at the Pay Advance Request Form link: https://forms.office.com/r/KzsNHneaCk

  • Management says that 350 employees requested advances on their pay in the last two cycles. Payroll was able to fix 200 or more of those, so they didn’t need the pay advance in the end. The rest received the requested advance.

  • To help the process go faster, you should not RE-submit any discrepancies that you have already reported.

  • DO, however, send in ALL of your discrepancies. Don't wait for one to be fixed before sending in the rest.

What’s Slowing Down the Process?

In addition to the sheer number of discrepancies to be fixed (24,000), high staff turn-over is slowing things down. People who quit pay have to be paid anything they’re owed before they leave. The fixes are complicated because the rules are different for different groups of employees. SHARE, for example, has negotiated different overtime rules, differentials, and policies from other unions in our hospital.

New pay discrepancies keep getting added, because staff aren’t back in the habit of punching-in with Kronos. Payroll is seeing about 150 new pay discrepancies in each week’s pay cycle, and says that correcting those discrepancies takes time away from the team making corrections that were due to the Kronos outage.

How Does this Affect My Taxes?

Everyone should have gotten a 2021 W-2 from UMass Memorial. These will not be changed as pay is fixed – the extra pay will show up in your 2022 W-2. The taxes are based on what you are actually paid during the year. You can go ahead and file your 2021 taxes. (We are hearing that some SHARE members who had a leave of absence haven’t gotten their separate W-2 from AbsenceOne for pay you get on a leave of absence. Contact SHARE and we can try to help.)

If people get their pay fixed, the extra pay may come in more than one payment, using smaller amounts, so that the extra pay doesn't trigger a higher tax rate for that paycheck.

Why Did Some People Get a Spreadsheet to Fill Out?

If Payroll is working on your case, and they need more information, they may send a spreadsheet for you to fill out with the details. (If you need help filling it out, SHARE can try to connect you with someone who can help.) If Payroll hasn’t gotten to your case yet, or if they are working on your case but have enough information, you won’t be sent a spreadsheet.

Watch for Fixes in Your Account

We’ve heard that sometimes people don’t know that their pay was fixed. If you are owed money, it will be direct deposited in your bank account. It may come in several small chunks (to avoid higher taxes). So pay attention to your account. Corrections made in your paycheck will be marked with a plus or a minus for each corrected day on your stub.

What if the Correction Is Not Correct?

If you feel that there is a mistake in the corrections, make sure to file a discrepancy. Management has assured SHARE that they will work with you until there’s a confident answer that the pay is correct.

Pay Advances

The hospital is going to offer pay advances again next week – watch your email from the hospital for details.

How Is Payroll Dealing with All of These Problems?

Our hospital’s Payroll department has added additional staff to help triage the issues, and they are working long hours. Many of the problems can only be addressed by Payroll specialists who know and understand the varied rules that apply in different situations, so the additional staff helps them to be able to focus on the more complicated tasks. The hospital has already issued thousands of checks.

Additionally, UMass Memorial has hired an outside contractor that is familiar with the Kronos issues. They are being brought in to help audit, and make sure that all employees get paid what’s owed them, even if the employee doesn’t report the discrepancy.

As You’ve Heard Before

The hospital continues to assure us that no employee will be shorted any pay in the end. (The employer is legally required to pay what they owe you. SHARE is committed to this too!) Also, Payroll is making sure that employees have 401K taken out so that they get their 401K match when they make any pay corrections.

 

In case you missed it:

System-Wide Information from UMass Memorial 

_____________________________________________

From:            Robin Sodano, Chief Information Officer, UMass Memorial Health

Brian Huggins, Senior Vice President, Finance & Corporate Controller, UMass Memorial Health

To:              All UMass Memorial Health Caregivers

Date:            March 4, 2022

Subject:         Kronos Update: Pay Corrections, Pay Advancement Program, Paid Time Off Requests

Our outstanding payroll team continues to work every day to make corrections on the approximately 24,000 incidents that have been submitted so far. With additional parts of our Kronos environment being returned to us, we continue to look for different methods to make these corrections faster but it will still take us months to complete them all.

How can you help?

The most important thing each of you can do to help is to make sure your time is accurately entered for current pay cycles. We receive about 150 new pay discrepancies in each week’s pay cycle and correcting these discrepancies takes time away from the team making corrections that were due to the outage. Please submit corrections from current period pay cycles via the check discrepancy form. Please do not submit those corrections to the Kronos Incident site.

If you have a pay discrepancy from the Kronos outage incident, either an underpayment or overpayment, please log these incidents as soon as possible. While we remain focused on those that have been underpaid, we will eventually correct those that have been overpaid. If you have been holding off on submitting an incident, please do not wait any longer. Please submit any pay discrepancies related to the Kronos outage using either of the two methods listed below:

1.      PREFERRED METHOD - Fill out the Kronos Incident Help Desk Form. You don’t need to be logged in to the UMass Memorial network to access this. Using this form will enable us to respond more quickly to your issue, (providing more detail is better for problem resolution).

2.      If you can’t access the form, you can still email kronosincident@umassmemorial.org or call 508-334-1500. In both cases, you must leave your full name, employee ID number, manager’s name and an explanation of your pay discrepancy.

Pay Advancement Request Window Opens Monday, March 7

The next cycle of temporary pay advances for those caregivers who have experienced a financial hardship from being significantly underpaid or not paid at all due to the Kronos outage will be March 7 to March 11, with payments beginning the week of March 14. Caregivers wishing to access this program should fill out the Kronos Advance Form. You don’t need to be logged in to the UMass Memorial network to access this. Using this form will enable us to process your request more quickly.

Currently, we expect to begin recoupment of these advances, including advances from the first two cycles, in April 2022.

Paid Time Off – Requests and Balances

We currently don’t have the Kronos functionality to correct Paid Time Off (PTO) balances. Our IS teams are still working with Kronos to repair this important function. Until then, no caregiver will be denied time off because of a negative balance. Once we can get the PTO function back to normal, it will take an additional two to six months to correct each and every PTO balance for all of our caregivers.  

We understand the frustration you may be feeling due to the Kronos outage. Thank you for your continued patience and willingness to help us resolve issues related to the outage as soon as possible. We remain committed to ensuring that all caregivers will be paid for every hour worked and to correcting all PTO accruals. We continue to ask for your patience as we work through each caregiver’s unique circumstances to make corrections.

Additional Resources

·        Kronos Incident Help Desk Form

·        Kronos Incident Hub page

Standing with Ukraine

SHARE recently received the following statement from our parent organization, AFSCME, about measures being taken to oppose the invasion of Ukraine. If you are looking for a reputable organization to send money to in order to help Ukrainians, you can find a useful list of links in their message.

From: President Saunders & Sec-Treas McBride <PSec-TreasMcBride@afscme.org>
Sent: Monday, March 7, 2022 2:45 PM
To: AFSCME Affiliate Leaders <leaders@affiliateleaders.com>
Subject: Standing with the people of Ukraine

AFSCME Family:

We have all watched with shock and outrage the latest developments in Ukraine. This sovereign democracy is under military attack by Vladimir Putin’s Russia, with entire cities leveled and civilian populations targeted.

Ukrainians are demonstrating extraordinary courage and resolve in standing up to a violent autocrat. Their defense of their country is nothing short of inspiring.

AFSCME’s belief in human rights – wherever in the world they may be threatened – demands that we do what we can. Last week, our International Executive Board passed a resolution expressing our solidarity with the people of Ukraine, including a strong condemnation of Putin’s aggression and our support for economic sanctions designed to cripple the Russian economy.

We hope that you will also consider a contribution to international relief organizations that are moving humanitarian aid to the people of Ukraine, who are engaged in a heroic fight to save their families, their communities and their nation. Please click on any of the links below to donate. Thank you. 

https://petitions.ituc-csi.org/support-ukraine?lang=en

https://peopleinneed.net/donate/once

https://donate.redcrossredcrescent.org/ua/donate/~my-donation

https://caritas.org/where-caritas-work/europe/ukraine/

https://razomforukraine.org

https://novaposhta.ua/eng/

In solidarity,

Lee Saunders                                   

President

Elissa McBride

Secretary-Treasurer                        

SHARE Digest: Staffing Survey Reminder, College Scholarships, and Black History Month

SHARE Survey about Staffing

Don’t forget to make your voice heard as we continue to prepare for contract negotiations. In the first in our series of surveys, we want to know: what attracts SHARE members to continue working at UMass Memorial? What compels others to look for jobs elsewhere? The survey should take about 3-5 minutes. It’s anonymous. You can take it on your phone if you want. Do it now! We’d love to maximize the number of responses before SHARE leaders describe the current staffing situation to hospital leaders at this Thursday’s Labor Management Partnership Council meeting.

2022 Central Massachusetts AFL-CIO Scholarship

This year’s scholarship opportunity has been announced, and the deadline for application is May 1. The lottery for these scholarships is open to any SHARE members, as well as children and grandchildren of members, who will graduate from high school this year and attend college next year. SHARE has been well-represented at these awards ceremonies, with winners for the past several consecutive years. We hope to see more this time! Read here for more details about the award, last year’s recipients, and how to apply.

Tweet of the Month

SHARE Survey about Staffing

What Makes Some SHARE Members Leave UMass Memorial?

Why Do Other SHARE Members Stay?

SHARE members are working short in lots of departments, and it's exhausting – especially after 2 years of COVID. SHARE members are the experts about why people leave and why people stay. We need management to understand what they should be doing to fix the staffing crisis and to keep good staff. 

In this survey, SHARE members can describe why they stay at UMass Memorial or why they are thinking of leaving. SHARE will summarize the results to give to management as part of our efforts to help the hospital get back up to full staff. 

The survey should take about 5-7 minutes. It’s anonymous. You can do it on your phone if you want. 

Thank you!

SHARE Is Solving Problems

At any given moment, SHARE leaders are working on a lot of different things. One project we’re always working at is Problem Solving.

Problem Solving can mean a lot of different things. Lately, specifically, we're having lots of meetings in SHARE departments about avoiding errors. SHARE members make thousands of decisions at work every day. With COVID-19 and many areas short-staffed, the pressure is on. SHARE aims to help our community recognize mistakes are human, and to help design systems that keep the work flow manageable.

If we make it easier to always do the right thing -- and easier to catch mistakes before they have any effect -- our hospital provides better care, and SHARE members can continue to consistently feel proud of the work that they do.

Learn more about Problem Solving: https://www.sharehospitalunion.org/union-support

Union Benefits and Your 2022-23 AFSCME ID Card

New AFSCME cards have begun arriving in the home mailboxes of SHARE members. We’re reprinting this article from a couple years back about the perks involved with your card. It’s all still true. Plus, the AFSCME Advantage/ UnionPlus programs (including the free college benefit) have only expanded since then . . .

Keep track of your AFSCME Member Number to take advantage!

Some SHARE members have recently been asking about the AFSCME union ID card they received in the mail. Why did I get this? you might wonder. What is it good for?

AFSCME is SHARE’s parent union. (SHARE is also known as AFSCME Local 3900.) And, your Union membership comes with perks. Nationwide, AFSCME represents over a million members. That creates a lot of leverage in negotiating deals on things like:

And many, many other good things. Visit the Union Plus website to explore what’s available. For many of those deals and services, you’ll need to provide your union local number, and your personal union member number, which are both printed on the card.

If you don’t have a membership card and need your membership number, please contact the SHARE office (508-929-4020). We’ll be happy to help you track that down.

Our union takes a very grassroots approach. We’re focused on the issues in our hospital, on working so that SHARE members can always be moving forward financially, and on continually strengthening our community so that we can all do work that we’re proud of. But going out for a cheaper meal can be pretty nice, too.

Mass General Brigham Reveals “Independent” Cost Analysis

Mass General Brigham continues its push to expand in central Massachusetts. UMass Memorial reports that “an ‘independent’ cost analysis prepared by a consultant selected and paid for by Mass General Brigham [MGB] was released . . . regarding MGB’s proposed expansion into Westborough, Woburn and Westwood. We were disappointed, but not surprised, that the ICA analysis was narrow in focus and skewed to favor MGB.” UMass Memorial contends that “The ICA [Independent Cost Analysis] failed to provide any analysis whatsoever of major cost drivers, the impact upon stability of local safety net hospitals, or the impact on health equity.” 

A recent piece in the Boston Globe says that “the proposal pits MGB’s need to grow against the state’s interest in maintaining a competitive health care marketplace,” describing how the MGB’s business model of targeting wealthier patients undercuts the work of local community hospitals. (Read “After failed China project, Mass General Brigham eyes growth at home.”)

Together with UMass Memorial and other groups, SHARE opposes the MGB’s proposed expansion. The Department of Public Health is currently taking rebuttals to the MGB’s independent analysis.

Blog Digest: Advance Pay Program, Health & Safety, Staying Connected, and More

Our new logo aims to remind our community that UMass Memorial works because SHARE members do.

It’s good news that the current COVID surge seems to be declining. However, we all know that doesn’t mean our hospital won’t continue to be extremely busy. Many SHARE members continue to work in departments that are strained and understaffed. One way our union is addressing that is at this week’s highly popular job fair.

As we head into a contract negotiating year, we are currently laying the ground work: getting ready for a survey of SHARE members, catching up with new people who haven’t yet signed a SHARE membership card, and revamping SHARE’s social media. You can support our union by liking the new SHARE Facebook page.

Kronos “Advance” Program: How Members Can Get Cash

SHARE pushed the hospital to find a way to get money to people faster than they were able to make paycheck corrections. We wish this “advance” system could have gotten set up sooner, but we’re still glad they are doing it. The program is designed to temporarily correct for the current problems since the Kronos errors cannot yet be fully resolved. (The advance should not be confused with grants such as the EASE program.)

SHARE members can apply again starting on Tuesday, January 25, 2022. The window closes at 4 pm on Friday, January 28, 2022. SHARE members can apply for $500, $1000, or $2000 salary advance. (See the bottom of this email for instructions for how to apply.)

For more information, including answers to questions that SHARE has heard from members about the Advance Program, read the full post.

UMass Memorial Answers SHARE Questions about COVID Health & Safety

SHARE Reps meet once a month from around the hospital to share what’s happening in their work areas, bringing the questions and concerns that they hear there. Some of the recent questions about health and safety would be of interest to many SHARE members, and we’ve rounded them up on our blog.

We’ve created this post that describes the recent changes to guidelines about rooming and exposure to COVID-positive patients on the nursing floors.

In a recent Townhall Meeting, it was stated that those UMass Memorial caregivers who’ve recently contracted COVID primarily contracted the disease in the community. We asked Dr. Robert Klugman, who oversees Employee Health about this. Read what Dr. Klugman has to say about how the hospital knows these employees weren’t infected at work.

Also, we put the following questions to UMass Memorial leader Dr. Kimi Kobayashi:

  • Yellow surgical masks: are they as safe as the blue ones? Is the hospital cutting corners?

  • Am I being told to wear the correct N95 mask?

  • Will the hospital limit visitors to clinics?

You can read Dr. Kobayashi’s answers in this post.

Incidentally, did you know that you can order free at-home COVID test kits to be delivered to your door?

Mass General Brigham Reveals “Independent” Cost Analysis

As part of its continued push to expand in central Massachusetts, consultants hired by MGB have prepared a cost analysis that paints an unsurprisingly positive view of the MGB’s proposal to expand into Central Massachusetts. Meanwhile, the Boston Globe recently printed a piece objecting to the expansion,   “After failed China project, Mass General Brigham eyes growth at home.” The Department of Public Health is currently taking rebuttals to the MGB’s independent analysis. Read more . . .

Getting a Pay Advance While the Kronos System Is Brought Back

When Kronos went out and we recognized what an effect the cyber-attack would have on our hospital’s payroll system, SHARE advocated for UMass Memorial to offer advances in pay to help offset any pay you might be temporarily shorted. (Ultimately, the hospital is required to ensure everyone’s pay is made whole, as described here.) The hospital has since put an Advance Pay system in place.

In case you missed it, we’ve reprinted UMass Memorial’s announcement describing the Kronos Pay Advancement System and how it works at the bottom of this post. Here are a few additional things you should know:

  1. The advance will be taxed like regular pay, not the IRS bonus rate. (However, if you opt for the $2000, you might pay a higher tax rate because it looks like you are getting paid that amount in a week and make $100K in the year. The member would get any extra tax taken back out when they file their taxes for 2022.) 

  2. 401K will be taken out of advance checks. The problem is, if you elect 401K deductions, you get the hospital match. If they don’t take it out, then you lose out on the match. You won’t end up “whole” for the year, since that advance is taking the place of your pay.  

  3. If someone puts in for the advance because they missed a paycheck, and their name is at the top of the list to get a fix, payroll may reach out to them to ask them if they want just the fix instead, or if they want both. 

  4. Managers do not have access to the specific question of “did this person ask for an advance”. They are aware of the compensation of their employees in summary for the month. Given that the last month has adjustments for thousands and future months will continue to have many more adjustments as well, we are told it will be nearly impossible for the manager to differentiate an advance from a correction.

From UMass Memorial

As mentioned in Dr. Dickson’s memo on January 14, 2022, we are establishing a temporary pay advancement program to help those caregivers who have experienced a financial hardship from being significantly underpaid or not paid at all due to the Kronos outage.

Caregivers wishing to access this program should fill out the Kronos Advance Form. You don’t need to be logged in to the UMass Memorial network to access this. Using this form will enable us to process your request more quickly.

You can also access and submit the form by:

  1. Scanning the QR code with your phone

  2. Scanning a completed paper form or taking a picture of it and emailing it to kronosincident@umassmemorial.org.

This advance is a lump sum payment, subject to applicable payroll taxes and deductions, and will be paid via direct deposit within seven (7) business days after completion of the form. Advances are available in either $500.00, $1,000.00 or $2,000.00 gross amounts. Only one request per caregiver will be paid. If, after the Kronos system is fully restored, UMass Memorial finds you were overpaid for hours you did not work, you will be responsible for reimbursing UMass Memorial for any overage, which will be done in equal portions over the course of future payroll cycles.

Availability

Access to this temporary program will be as follows:

  • The program opens on Wednesday, January 19, 2022 and will close at 4 pm on Friday, January 21, 2022.

  • The program opens again on Tuesday, January 25, 2022 and will close at 4 pm on Friday, January 28, 2022.

We must close the program each week on Friday to allow time for the response team to process requests.

If you have questions about this temporary pay advancement or your obligations in the event of an overpayment, please contact your HR Business Partner with questions.

Additional Resources

 

Health & Safety Q & A about Masks for Employees & Visitors in Clinics

At a recent SHARE Rep meeting, questions about health and safety came up that would likely be of interest to many SHARE members.

Dr. Kimi Kobayashi

We asked Dr. Kimi Kobayashi, UMass Memorial’s Chief Quality Officer to answer these questions:

Q. Clinic staff wonder why they get the yellow surgical masks. They are concerned that because they rip easily that they aren’t effective barriers for COVID protection. They would rather have the blue masks. Are the yellow surgical masks safe? Why can’t the clinics get blue masks?

A. We have received many questions about the yellow masks. Interestingly they are actually more sophisticated than the blue masks. That’s because they are the hypoallergenic masks which is the reason why some folks feel that they are “thinner.” In terms of filtration ability which really reflects the ability to protect caregivers, it performs the same as the blue masks. All of that being said, I think folks will start to see less of the yellow masks because our inventory of them is set to expire either this week or next.

Q. Another mask question in clinics: They say they are only allowed to order the Gerson N95, which doesn’t fit many people, is cheaply made and the elastic headband breaks easily. Are there better N95s available in ambulatory areas? Are the Gerson N95s effective?

A. The clinical staff should be wearing the N95 mask that they were fit tested to. If that is the Gerson then it should be ok. Do you know if these are folks that are looking for the mask they were fit-tested to? If so, they could go get repeat fit-testing to see if they might fit to a different mask. The clinic should be able to order the specific mask that a caregiver is fit tested to.

Q. Is there any thought to limiting visitors to ambulatory clinics? I hear frustration from clinic staff who find out they’ve been exposed to COVID from a patient’s family or companion during appointments.

A. We have consistently and continuously evaluated our visitor policies. We actually just had a call today about the ambulatory visitor policy. We review DPH guidance which currently requires us to allow visitors and we also benchmark with other peer institutions in the state and we are right in line with other organizations.

How Does the Hospital Know that Caregivers Are Not Getting COVID at Work?

Dr. Robert Klugman, Associate Vice President and Medical Director Employee and Occupational Health Services

Because SHARE members have been asking, we put that question to Dr. Robert Klugman. Among other things, Dr. Klugman serves as UMass Memorial’s Medical Director of Employee Health. Specifically, we wanted to understand: How does UMass Memorial know that the employees who’ve recently gotten COVID have done so in the community? How do we know most of them didn’t contract the disease while working in our hospital?

Here’s what Dr. Klugman had to say about Covid-19 infections in healthcare workers in our hospital:

  • Presently, Omicron makes up essentially all the infections we are seeing.

  • It is highly contagious, and requires far fewer virus particles to be transmitted than Delta and others, regardless of vaccination status.

  • We track all healthcare workers who contract Covid-19 and have analyzed transmission patterns for many months, both in terms of patient-caregiver as well as caregiver-caregiver.

  • We have had a huge upswing of cases since late December with the advent of Omicron.

  • Despite literally hundreds of infections, we have seen only rare patient-caregiver and caregiver-caregiver infections. This includes our ED’s, where Covid is prevalent, as well as Covid units. This is, in part, due to masking, distancing, PPE.

  • We track healthcare workers who test positive and report that they having eaten with, sat with, spent time with other healthcare workers without consistent masking and distancing, and have had very very few of those potentially exposed  test positive from these exposures.

  • We have had countless reports of ill family members, friends and other outside contacts as the source of a HCW infection and in many cases, staff have not been on site or work remotely when become positive.


SHARE Friends & Family Job Fair Update

Hi SHARE member,

Click the image to see full details. You can download this interactive flyer to attach to an email, or print paper copies to share.

For everyone’s safety, we are changing the time and place of next week’s SHARE Friends and Family Job Fair. It will take place online next Thursday, January 27th, from 2-5pm. You can sign up a friend or family member for a half-hour time slot to meet one-on-one with a UMass Memorial recruiter to talk about jobs at UMass Memorial. (We will reschedule an in-person Job Fair soon.)

Spaces are limited, so sign up soon!

SHARE members who sign up someone who comes to the job fair will be entered in a raffle for a SHARE Chocolate Basket and gift certificates to George’s Pizza.

Want an easy way to spread the word? Use the button below to automatically create a flyer to send to your friends & family?

Process Changes in COVID Patient Care

SHARE has received some questions from members about a recent change regarding patients with (or under investigation for) COVID-19. Hospital leaders have assured SHARE that the new procedures are based on safe, common practices.  

A recent study comparing MGH and BWH showed that even though 22% of COVID-19 patients were cared in negative pressure rooms at MGH (compared to 96% at BWH), the rate of HCW infection was the same. Most patients at MGH were cared in a standard room without a HEPA filter.
— UMass Memorial

WHAT CHANGED? 

Before, the hospital required these patients to be roomed in isolated and negative-pressure rooms, and that caregivers be in the room for a more limited amount of time. However, those guidelines have changed. Over the course of the pandemic, researchers have come to understand that COVID-positive patients actually pose low risk of transmitting the disease in well-ventilated spaces, including standard hospital rooms. Therefore, patients may now be roomed in positive-pressure rooms, and staff may remain in the room with these patients for up to 2.5 hours. 

WHAT IS UMASS MEMORIAL DOING TO MAKE SURE PATIENTS ARE IN THE APPROPRIATE ROOMS?  

Bed Control is up-to-date with the latest guidelines. The Infection Control team reviews patients daily to monitor for appropriate room placement and can work with them to make changes if necessary. 

DO OTHER HOSPITALS FOLLOW SIMILAR GUIDELINES FOR COVID PATIENTS? 

According to UMass Memorial, hospitals in the Boston area and around the country have cared for large numbers of COVID-19 positive patients in standard rooms without evidence that COVID–19 transmission is higher.  

WHAT SHOULD I DO IF I HAVE QUESTIONS OR CONCERNS ABOUT THE PROCEDURES I’M ASKED TO USE IN CARING FOR COVID PATIENTS? 

Talk with the nurse manager or nursing supervisor in your area.  

Honoring Dr. King, Voluntary OT & Redeployments, Kronos, Free College, and More

Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Martin Luther King weekend is here. Although that involves holiday pay and even a three-day weekend for some SHARE members, we also want to thank those SHARE members who will be working, as always, helping patients and our hospital.  

Dr. King was in Memphis to support striking sanitation workers who sought unionization when he was assassinated.

SHARE has many reasons to honor Dr. King and his legacy, including because of his deep commitment to unions. "The labor movement was the principal force that transformed misery and despair into hope and progress," King said. 

Because MLK day is not recognized at Marlborough Hospital, SHARE members there will all be working as usual; the SHARE negotiating team is currently pushing for the holiday to be recognized in its upcoming contract agreement. 

KRONOS 

SHARE continues to work with UMass Memorial and the Attorney General’s office to fix the Kronos mess. The hospital says they are moving as fast as possible to get this fixed.  

  • SHARE will work to make sure SHARE members get their pay fixed accurately. 

  • SHARE will make sure SHARE members who have been overpaid can set up a repayment plan that works for them. 

  • SHARE is escalating situations where SHARE members got no paycheck to get them paid. 

  • SHARE is proposing to the hospital to give a pay “advance” to anyone who needs it – a cash loan for people who need to pay their bills now.   

In our last blog post about Kronos and Payroll, we included a link to outdated information about the hospital’s Employee Assistance Program (EAP), which now administers the EASE fund for financial relief in hard times. We’re sorry for any confusion or frustration this may have caused you. UMass Memorial’s EAP is now run by an outside company, Optum. This is the correct contact information to reach them:  

  • By telephone: 866-263-3525 (This is the best way to reach EAP) 

  • Online: www.LiveandWorkWell.com, Company Code: umassmemorial  

  • Mobile device: Visit the above website for instructions on downloading the app

Another COVID Surge: Volunteering to Help and Possible Redeployment of SHARE Members 

As the hospital cancels outpatient procedures and adds surge spaces for COVID beds, they may need staff to help in different areas. 

Volunteering for Extra Time and Over-Time: SHARE members who want to pick up time where they are needed can email laborpoolnonproviders@umassmemorial.org. (Include your name, job title, department, campus location, personal phone number, work email, and what days/times that you would be available to work beyond your current schedule.)  

The more people who volunteer, the fewer people will potentially need to be deployed involuntarily. SHARE and UMass Memorial will continue to discuss possible redeployment as plans become more clear. For reference, you can see the agreement we made for the last surge.

In the News: Federal Student Loan Relief 

In case you missed it, the federal government has extended the Federal Student Loan Payment pause until after May 1 of this year. Our parent union, AFSCME, has been fighting for this, and it’s a great help for many Americans during the pandemic. AFSCME also provides help to individual union members with student debt. We’ve reprinted this letter from AFSCME to our blog describing the opportunities for those who have student loan debt

AFSCME Free College Benefit 

Of course, one great way to avoid student loans is to avoid having to pay for college altogether. Thanks to the AFSCME Free College Benefit, union members and their families can earn a variety of online degrees at no cost. Many SHARE members have already benefitted from this program, which continues to add more degree programs and affiliated educational institutions. For details and the latest offerings, visit the AFSCME Free College Benefit website.   

Federal Student Loan Payment Relief: A Note From AFSCME

In case you missed it, the federal government has extended the Federal Student Loan Payment pause until after May 1 of this year. Our parent union, AFSCME, has been fighting for this, and it’s a great help for many Americans during the pandemic. AFSCME also provides help to individual union members with student debt, as described in this recent letter . . .

Dear member,

If you have federal student loans, there are some important deadlines and updates you should know about.

Millions of federal student loan borrowers have taken advantage of COVID-19 emergency relief and have had their loan payments paused since March 2020. In a victory for working people, President Joe Biden announced that the pause on student loan payments will be extended until May 1, 2022. This means federal student loan borrowers won’t have to start making payments until June 2022.

As your union, AFSCME fought hard to make sure this relief was put into place and that an extension was granted to provide further relief to working families. Public service workers continue to serve on the front lines in the fight against the virus and working families across the country are still struggling to cope with the economic devastation caused by the pandemic.

SHARE YOUR STUDENT DEBT STORY: Tell us why the pause on federal student loan debt payments is important to you and your family.

AFSCME will continue our strong advocacy to provide further student loan relief to working families, but we must also be prepared for a transition back to paying student loans. If you are a federal student loan borrower, we encourage you to read 6 Ways to Prepare for Student Loan Repayment to Begin Again. You can also visit StudentAid.gov/coronavirus to find the most up-to-date information about the restart of student loan payments.

Although the payment pause is scheduled to end, public service workers may be eligible for other student debt relief under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. We encourage you to review the requirements for this loan forgiveness programs, including the recent temporary changes to PSLF, which expand the number of public service workers eligible for loan forgiveness. To benefit from these changes to PSLF, some borrowers will need to take steps before Oct. 31, 2022. Learn more about these PSLF temporary changes at StudentAid.gov/pslfwaiver.

If you have questions or concerns about your student loans, you should contact your student loan servicer for free help. Contact information for loan servicers is available at on AFSCME’s Student Debt Resource page.

We will be reaching out in the New Year with more information about student debt relief. Stay tuned!

In Solidarity,

Nicole Pollard
Executive Assistant to the President

Kronos Update from SHARE

To state the obvious: the Kronos situation is horrible for some SHARE members. It couldn’t have happened at a worse time – many SHARE members are picking up tons of overtime, there are incentive bonuses, and complicated holiday pay situations. SHARE members are stressed out and over-worked by the pandemic and staffing shortages. And it happened over Christmas, a time when many SHARE members need that extra cash in their paychecks.  

You Will Get Paid What You Are Owed 

It’s the law: UMass Memorial must pay you the correct amount as soon as they are able to. In SHARE’s discussions with the hospital, it’s clear that UMass Memorial is committed to getting it right. The Massachusetts Attorney General’s office is paying close attention. And SHARE will help members make sure the corrections are made to their pay. 

Our best advice to you: Keep track of your hours for yourself, in addition to documenting your hours for the hospital, so you can check to make sure it’s correct later.  

What’s Going on with Corrections? 

Staff have reported over 11,000 paycheck errors. Payroll is triaging them, focusing first on staff who are missing full paychecks, and those who make the least money. Payroll has added staff to help with this job. The experienced staff who best know the payroll rules (differentials, etc.) and the Infinium system (the hospital’s payroll software) are focused on fixing the triaged priority situations. 

However, they aren’t able to keep up, and not all the 11,000 reports of errors haven’t gone through triage yet.  

What You Can Do If You Face Extreme Hardship 

Your pay is going to be fixed. If you can live without the money owed to you for now, we recommend to sit tight and wait, so Payroll can focus on the most urgent situations and keep their process moving forward.

In case of emergency, there’s the hospital’s EASE fund, which is designed to help employees in need, as well as Hardship Help services offered to all union members through the Union Plus program 

Some SHARE members are deeply affected by the Kronos situation, especially with everything else going on right now. Thanks to everyone for being patient. Your kindness goes a long way.  

You Can Pay It Back Gradually, If You Owe 

If the hospital overpays you, you will have to pay it back. However, the hospital has agreed with SHARE that SHARE members should be able to pay it back gradually if they need to. The hospital says its first priority will be to pay staff any money they are owed. 

When Will This Be Fixed? 

The hospital has told SHARE that employees will continue to get the same amount (based on the November 28 week check) until Kronos is up and running again. If this goes as the hospital expects, the first paycheck based on your actual hours would be the beginning of February.  

First you will get an accurate paycheck based on your hours. Then the hospital will work on using your time records (punching, paper and through the app) to correct the December and January checks. Fixing every mistake will take weeks, if not a couple of months. 

All Paid-Time-Off banks (earned time, etc.) may currently be wrong, so you should ignore any numbers that you see on your paychecks. The hospital has raised the caps to allow extra time to be accrued while this is broken. Keep your own records of your time off, just to be safe. 

What Do We Know about What Happened? 

UMass Memorial says that Kronos (and the cyber pirates) only had access to very limited personal information: employee names, the hours they worked, and maybe the age of the employees. Sensitive employee information, such as social security numbers, is kept in Infinium, UMass Memorial’s local payroll system.  

The Kronos attack was one of the largest international data breaches of the last year. Although the Kronos attack affected over 2000 clients worldwide (including the Target chain of stores, Tufts Medical Center, and the MBTA), we’re told that UMass Memorial was in many ways at the “tip of the spear” in having to figure out how to get employees paid fast. The hospital is one of few organizations that pays on a weekly basis -- the hospital had 48 hours to figure out how to get people paid after the system went down, while many employers like Tufts Medical pay every 2 weeks, or even monthly. The hospital says that other employers hit by this did the same thing UMass Memorial did – continue to pay employees based on a past paycheck. 

Epic, our hospital’s other huge IT system, is completely separate from Kronos. (Epic appears also not to be susceptible to the Log4j attacks that have been in the news lately. Unlike Kronos, Epic does not have cloud-based databases.)  

When SHARE asked why there was no back-up system for a situation like this, one senior leader compared the Kronos outage to Hurricane Katrina: a worst-case perfect-storm scenario beyond anyone’s contingency plans.  

It may not be accidental that the cyber attackers hit in December. It’s the worst time for employees, and for businesses who have to do end-of-year tax work, so the hackers could demand a higher ransom. 

Kronos has now paid the ransom to the cyber attackers. The company is in the long process of unlocking, inspecting, and testing its systems before those can go live again. After that, the hospital will then begin its own inspection and test processes with Kronos. Then, finally, UMass Memorial will be able to issue correct paychecks again.