HHC Doctors’ Contract Has 9.42% Raise
HHC Doctors' Contract Has
9.42% Raise
By
RICHARD STEIER
Members of the Doctors Council employed
by the Health and Hospitals Corporation Dec. 6 overwhelmingly ratified a
contract that will provide them with 9.42 percent in wage hikes over 32-1/2
months and increase longevity bonuses and HHC payments to members' annuity
funds.
BARRY
LIEBOWITZ: HHC deal a popular one.
The deal's terms
are consistent with the agreement reached by the Bloomberg administration with
District Council 37 in July. In a carryover from the previous contract that
parallels a feature of an earlier DC 37 deal, it will provide an additional
1.3-percent raise linked to improved productivity that is retroactive to July 1,
2004. |
'Helps Recruit, Retain'
"This contract meets the unique recruitment and retention needs for doctors
at New York City's public hospitals and cities," Doctors Council President Barry
Liebowitz said in a statement.
The pact begins July 1, 2005, with the 1,250 HHC Attending Physicians and
other medical personnel employed by HHC getting a 3.25-percent raise retroactive
to that date. The .10-percent raise beyond what DC 37 members got for a similar
period of that deal is offset by the Doctors Council pact running an additional
14 days, with an expiration date of March 14, 2008.
In between, union members will receive a 2-percent wage increase retroactive
to Aug. 13 of this year, and a 4-percent hike as of Feb. 13, 2007. Those are the
identical hikes negotiated by DC 37.
Fringe-benefit improvements include increases of between $99 and $397
annually - based on both years of service and the particular title - in annual
longevity payments. Those in the titles of Attending Physician II, for example,
would have the five-year differential increase from $2,250 to $2,349 annually by
the end of the contract, their 10-year differential would improve from $4,750 to
$4,960, and their 15-year payment would go from $7,500 to $7,831.
Other Gains
An Attending Physician III would get an annual payment of $2,871 after five
years, compared to the old standard of $2,750, and his or her 10-year bonus
would rise from $5,750 to $6,004, with the 15-year differential going from
$9,000 to $9,397. In a slight variation on the DC 37 deal, but at the same cost,
on the final day of the contract HHC will increase all the longevity
differentials by the equivalent of .34 percent of payroll for the entire
bargaining unit.
An increase in HHC's contribution to members' annuity funds, which the union
estimates will be about $100-per-year more for full-time staff, will take effect
retroactive to July 13, 2006, with a lump-sum payment into the fund to be
implemented retroactive to Nov. 12.
The contract also provides for doctors to be given greater input on
patient-care issues through an expansion of the labor-management patient-care
committee.