Rhode Island Hospital Medical Residents Win Union Election, 464 to 27

Nearly 700 medical residents with Brown University Health are now unionized with the Committee of Residents and Interns Union under the Service Employees International Union. The residents hope the union can help raise their wages and benefits

Medical residents at Rhode Island Hospital have won their union with 94% of the vote.
Medical residents at Rhode Island Hospital have won their union with 94% of the vote.
The Public’s Radio
Share
Medical residents at Rhode Island Hospital have won their union with 94% of the vote.
Medical residents at Rhode Island Hospital have won their union with 94% of the vote.
The Public’s Radio
Rhode Island Hospital Medical Residents Win Union Election, 464 to 27
Copy

Medical residents with Brown University Health, formerly called Lifespan, have formed a doctors’ union at Rhode Island Hospital.

In a small fluorescent-lit room in the Thomas J. O’Neill, Jr. federal building in Boston Tuesday afternoon, National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) employees spent more than 90 minutes opening envelopes and counting ballots.

When it came time to place the hot pink ballots in yes and no piles, organizers and attorneys with the Committee of Residents and Interns Union under the Service Employees International Union, or CIR-SEIU, leaned in to watch.

The yes piles grew to include hundreds of votes, with a final tally of 464 yes votes and 27 no votes out of the 689 employees the NLRB considers eligible. According to the NLRB, there were two void ballots and 196 physicians who did not mail in their ballots.

The union will now represent all Brown University Health residents who are employed by Rhode Island Hospital, whether or not they voted yes. CIR-SEIU says the union believes it is the first doctors’ union in the state.

In an emailed response, a spokesperson with Brown University Health said “We appreciate all who made their voices heard through this election and look forward to working with CIR in good faith while best serving our patients and communities.” The union went to a vote because Rhode Island Hospital did not voluntarily recognize residents as a union.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

As funding dries up and political scrutiny intensifies, artists turn to grassroots networks, mutual aid, and historical resilience to navigate a turbulent new era in American arts and culture
Where are things headed if the Trump administration flouts the rule of law? With Elon Musk overseeing sharp cuts to government programs, how should Democrats respond? And how can people concerned about the Trump administration make their voices heard?
The nonpartisan demonstration focused on calling out billionaires. Organizers said their aims were to put power back in the hands of people
Rob Martin spent decades making the ocean safer for whales and fishermen alike. Now, after losing his NOAA job under Trump’s cuts, he fears the cost of silencing science and sidelining expertise
After a long legal battle, Congregation Jeshuat Israel leaves Touro Synagogue — their spiritual home for over a century — as a new chapter begins under new tenants and old tensions linger
Cost, timeline and potential asks of state and city are still unknown