Tag: Rent

  • ‘More than half of my paycheck goes to rent’: young US doctors push to unionize

    ‘More than half of my paycheck goes to rent’: young US doctors push to unionize

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    Young doctors just out of medical school working as resident physicians, fellows and interns at major US hospitals are organizing unions at an increasing rate, citing long-running problems highlighted by the Covid-19 pandemic and a need to rethink the struggles young doctors face in the profession.

    The Committee of Interns and Residents, an affiliate of SEIU, added five unionized sites in 2022 compared with about one a year before the pandemic and the surge has continued in 2023 with multiple union election filings. It currently represents over 25,000 residents, fellows and interns across the US, comprising about 15% of all resident and fellow physicians.

    Over 2,500 residents and fellows at Mass General Brigham in Boston are currently waiting to have a union election date set after filing this year.

    As with other industries facing a renewed interest in unionization from their staff, the US’s rich and powerful hospitals have responded with well-funded anti-union campaigns and tactics to delay union elections and contract negotiations.

    Hospital management has opposed the unionization effort, declining to voluntarily recognize the union, encouraging residents not to sign union authorization cards ahead of the election filing and writing local op-eds in opposition to unionization.

    Since going public with their union plans, staff have been sent emails and been invited to meetings to try to dissuade residents from unionizing, “often counting on myths around what unionizing would mean”, said Dr Sascha Murillo, a third-year internal medicine resident at Massachusetts general hospital.

    “They tried to dangle some carrots with the salary increases and benefit changes that we’re going to see next year, but the only way we’re going to quantify that for the long term is by having a union and an actual contract,” said Murillo.

    The unionizing campaign took off after vulnerabilities in the healthcare system were exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic, she said, with residents working on the frontlines and bearing the brunt of staffing shortages, an influx of Covid-19 patients, and patients who deferred medical care.

    Mass General Brigham offices in Somerville, Massachusetts.
    Mass General Brigham offices in Somerville, Massachusetts. Photograph: Boston Globe/Getty Images

    Residents often work 80 hours or more a week while being paid barely enough to cover rent in expensive cities like Boston. They often cannot leave or change jobs before they complete the three-year residency program.

    “We’re the ones who are often the first faces that patients see. We’re privy to the issues our patients face and want to be able to advocate for our patients,” added Murillo. “These hospital systems are incredibly powerful. We’re seeing a trend across healthcare of these huge mergers and consolidation of power and it’s even more important for all workers in the healthcare system to be able to have a seat at the table to really ensure that those at the top understand what we face day to day in delivering patient care and that we’re able to check that power.”

    About 1,400 residents at Penn Medicine in Philadelphia filed for a union election being held in the beginning of May 2023. Penn Medicine has hired law firm Cozen O’Connor, which specializes in union avoidance, in response to the union organizing effort and has encouraged residents to be wary of the union’s promises.

    “It still feels like we aren’t being heard. It feels like the institution is still sending a message that they know what’s best for us, that they want to stay in a position of power,” said Dr Chantal Tapé, a third-year resident in family medicine.

    Tapé said there was also a need to change the perception of residency programs as an inherently exploitative stage that residents just need to struggle through.

    “Our big push is to have a union so that we have a seat at the table, so that there’s a system for accountability where resident voices are heard and hopefully persists across the years so that the issues that are most important to a resident at Penn 10 years from now have the same sort of venue for being heard as the issues that we’re experiencing right now,” she added.

    Over 450 residents, interns and fellows at George Washington University are voting in a union election on 25 and 26 April.

    “There’s been a large uproar of residents unionizing because residents and fellows across the nation have felt exploited in their jobs, undervalued, underappreciated, overworked in really unsustainable working conditions,” said Dr Marysa Miller, a first-year internal medicine resident at George Washington. “My starting salary was right around $64,000, which when you divide that out into 80-hour work weeks, I make about $15 an hour, far below the living standard in the city, so more than half of my paycheck goes to rent.”

    Ahead of their union election, the Dean of the GW School of Medicine, Dr Barbara Bass wrote an email to all residents where she argued in favor of a direct relationship, referring to the union as a third party and citing concerns about the impacts a union could have on professional and mentoring relationships between faculty and residents.

    “I think that was really just a tactic to try to scare people. And it’s really just not true, and not something that any unionized campaign amongst residents and fellows has seen across the country,” added Miller. “We are really the ones that are on the frontlines,” said Miller. “But ironically, we’re the voice that’s not listened to and I think that’s kind of what’s been seen throughout all of these union campaigns that are popping up through America.”

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    Some 1,200 residents and fellows at Montefiore hospital in New York City won their union election in February 2023, with 82% voting in favor of the union. Residents at Sutter Health California Pacific medical center and Lifelong Medical Care in California also won union elections in 2023.

    Ahead of the union vote in New York City, an anti-union video claimed “a vote for this union is a vote against us, your educational leaders”. The video presentation included slides with a misspelled “no ragrets” neck tattoo to warn about the “permanent decision” of unionizing, followed by a slide of a brain where a doctor encourages residents to use the right part of their brain in deciding on their vote.

    Residents at the University of Vermont medical center, USC Keck and Greater Lawrence family health center in Massachusetts won union elections in 2022, and 1,500 residents at the University of Washington joined the CIR-SEIU.

    At Stanford Health Care in California 1,478 residents and fellows won their union election in May 2022.

    Stanford criticized unions ahead of the vote, claiming they prefer a direct relationship with individual residents. The National Labor Relations Board recently ruled against Stanford for refusing to furnish information before bargaining with the union.

    Dr Philip Sossenheimer, an internal medicine resident at Stanford, explained the union drive was driven by issues residents experienced during the pandemic and doctors wanting to use unionization as a vehicle to address ongoing issues throughout the healthcare system and how those impact residents and patients.

    “Our generation collectively is starting to realize the sort of losses that have come from degradation of labor strength in this country and declining rate of union membership, and I think broadly, as a society, we’re starting to reflect on what that power imbalance means for the average citizen, particularly since as people in this country, we spend a substantial amount of our time at work.”

    The Penn Medicine Hospital on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
    The Penn Medicine hospital on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Photograph: Charles Mostoller/Reuters

    At Children’s national hospital in Washington DC, residents organized a demonstration across the street from the hospital during lunch breaks to demand better pay, improved staffing, and other demands central to the union in new contract negotiations. Though a contract was settled in December 2022, the hospital is currently taking legal action against the union over the demonstration, claiming the union violated a “no strike” clause. The hospital has not commented on the action due to the pending litigation.

    “It feels like such a retaliation,” said Dr Lydia Lissanu, a first-year resident at Children’s national hospital. “At the very least if it feels like they want to intimidate us even if it doesn’t work, they want us to know they’re very upset with us.”

    Lissanu added that residents have been increasingly organizing unions because of how they were the ones forced to pick up the slack for vulnerabilities exposed in the healthcare system during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “We’re being asked to pick up the slack essentially from all of the other shortages in the hospital, all of the things that have happened in Covid, all of the pediatric respiratory viruses surging all at once. A lot was expected of us, a lot of slack that we had to pick up with very little recognition, very little reward. We’re asking to be treated fairly and be paid for our labor, we no longer feel that we should be grateful for having this job, they should be grateful for us and what we bring to the table.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Avg monthly rent in north, east Bengaluru rises up to 24% in Jan-Mar: Anarock

    Avg monthly rent in north, east Bengaluru rises up to 24% in Jan-Mar: Anarock

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    New Delhi: North and east Bengaluru have witnessed maximum appreciation of up to 24 per cent in average monthly rent for a 1,000-square feet two-bedroom apartment in the last one year among seven major cities, according to property consultant Anarock.

    In its report released on Thursday, real estate consultant Anarock said that Thanisandra Main Road and Marathahalli-ORR in Bengaluru recorded highest residential rental growth of 24 per cent each year-on-year in January-March period for a standard 2BHK home of 1,000 square feet area.

    Whitefield and Sarajpur in Bengaluru were at second and third positions with 21 per cent and 20 per cent growth, respectively, in rental between January-March 2022 and January-March 2023.

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    The consultant said that areas in east and north Bengaluru have seen a spurt in rental demand.

    Bengaluru currently has the highest rental yield of 4.1 per cent among all major cities, followed by Mumbai with 3.9 per cent.

    Prashant Thakur, Sr Director & Head – Research, Anarock Group, said, “When it comes to rental demand and zooming rents, Bengaluru currently stands out among the top 7 cities, with east and north Bengaluru the biggest blips on the rental radar map owing to the IT/ITeS belt there.”

    Abhishek Tripathi, co-founder, Settl, said: “In a place like Bangalore during the pandemic, huge capital was deployed into hiring talent, especially in the IT sector and startups. During the same time, due to labour shortage, the increase in building supply was restricted and when the lockdown restrictions were removed and offices started to open up, people started moving to tier-I cities and settling down.”

    “This disparity has created a housing crisis, especially in tier 1 cities in Bangalore. Hence, the increase in rent is a result of these multifarious factors,” Tripathi said.

    As per the report, average monthly rentals for a standard 2BHK home of 1,000 sq ft at Thanisandra Main Road increased from Rs 21,000 per month in Q1 (January-March) 2022 to Rs 26,000/month in Q1, 2023.

    At Marathahalli-ORR, average monthly rentals increased from Rs 22,500/month last year to Rs 28,000/month in Q1 2023.

    The data showed that Pune’s three standout markets with high rental growth between Q1 2022 and Q1 2023 are Hinjewadi, Baner and Wagholi, which witnessed rental value growth of 19 per cent, 15 per cent and 13 per cent, respectively.

    In Chennai, the top 3 markets to witness high rental values growth are Pallavaram, Perambur and Oragadam, with rents in this period growing by 16 per cent, 10 per cent and 11 per cent respectively.

    In NCR, the top three markets were Sohna Road in Gurugram (rental values increased by 13 per cent), Sector-150 in Noida (15 per cent growth) and Dwarka in Delhi with a rental value growth of 10 per cent.

    In MMR, the top three markets for rental value growth were Chembur, Ghodbunder Road (Thane) and Mulund, which saw 17 per cent, 14 per cent and 14 per cent growth, respectively.

    Kolkata’s top three markets with high rental value growth between Q1 2022 and Q1 2023 were EM Bypass, Joka and Rajarhat, where rents rose by 13 per cent, 11 per cent and 10 per cent, respectively.

    In Hyderabad, the top three markets were HITECH City and Kondapur, which saw rental values increase by 12 per cent each, and Gachibowli with 11 per cent growth.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Veterinary Centre Shuts Over ‘Non-Payment Of Rent’

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    Mawar Qalamabad Inhabitants Aghast  

    Murtaza Mushtaq

    Handwara, Apr 19 (GNS): The inhabitants of Mawar Qalamabad and its adjacent areas are up in arms as the only veterinary centre catering several areas has gone shut since last two weeks.

    A local delegation to GNS, led by District President Kupwara, JKAADP, Mohammad Ashraf Dar, said that a veterinary centre was functioning in the area for the last many years and would cater to the needs of several areas in Mawar belt. The centre, they said, was shut nearly a fortnight ago after the owner of the property, where the centre was setup, claimed to have not received any rent for almost six years now.

    Aghast over the non-availability of any alternative, the locals have urged the authorities concerned to make some alternate arrangement till the issue is resolved.

     “We also urge district administration Kupwara to look into the matter for an early redressal of the issue”, they further said. (GNS)

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    #Veterinary #Centre #Shuts #NonPayment #Rent

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • No ELEC reports, late rent and an unpaid steakhouse bill: Financial woes lead to Somerset GOP tumult

    No ELEC reports, late rent and an unpaid steakhouse bill: Financial woes lead to Somerset GOP tumult

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    state of the state new jersey 80915

    The bill was eventually paid, according to Somerset GOP Chair Tim Howes and former Sen. Christopher “Kip” Bateman, who said he interceded to get it done. But the episode shows just how far the party has fallen.

    As recently as 2017, Republicans completely controlled the wealthy suburban county, where they had dominated for decades. The county produced Republican Gov. Christie Whitman and even the Republican gubernatorial nominee in 2021, Jack Ciattarelli. They also had one of the strongest fundraising operations in the state.

    Now, Somerset County Republicans hold no county-wide offices and there isn’t a single Republican from Somerset County in the Legislature.

    The party’s financial woes didn’t end with the steakhouse bill. They were months late on rent for their Somerville headquarters and, most alarming to Howes’ critics, the party hasn’t filed a legally-required campaign finance disclosure with the Election Law Enforcement Commission since January 2021, when it reported just shy of $12,000 in the bank.

    The lack of disclosure risks major fines for the cash-strapped committee. And some party officials say there’s even less of an excuse for that under the leadership of Howes, an election attorney.

    A group of Somerset Republicans including Bateman is now attempting to get Howes to resign and, failing that, to get a detailed accounting of the party’s finances. But Howes, who was easily reelected chair in 2022, plans to stay in office until his term is up in 2024, leaving his critics to see if there’s a way to force him out.

    “My interest is just making the Republican Party relevant again in Somerset. It hasn’t been for a lot of reasons. You can’t blame the chairman for everything, but we haven’t won an election in years,” Bateman said in a phone interview with POLITICO.

    On April 4, almost two dozen current and former party officials, as well as several former elected officials from the county — including Bateman and former Gov. Donald DiFrancesco — outlined their complaints in a letter to Howes calling for his immediate resignation.

    “Your failure to comply with the mandatory legal requirements set forth by ELEC, as well as your utter lack of transparency and your denial surrounding this failure, are indisputable and indefensible,” reads the letter, which accuses Howes of “financial malfeasance and deception.”

    The letter claims that the party’s fundraising has dropped to “historic lows,” that it’s six months behind in rent payments for its Somerville headquarters, and notes that all eight countywide Republican candidates during his tenure have lost “by record margins.”

    “If you refuse [to resign], we will call a special meeting of the SCRO to remove you from office,” they wrote.

    Years of decline beginning with Trump election

    Howes, who took on the chairmanship in 2020, can’t be blamed for the drastic political shift in Somerset county. Republican losses there started before Howes took the reins, with the GOP going from holding every county-wide office in 2017 to none by 2021.

    “I came in the sixth inning. I was the middle relief pitcher,” Howes said in a phone interview.

    Howes said party officials had a “difference of opinion” with Char Steakhouse on how many people attended the holiday party and that “once we settled that, I dropped off the check.”

    Howes also said that the party’s rent has since been paid and that he’s “working on perfecting” the overdue ELEC reports now that he has a new treasurer in place, but declined to say why the party has gone two years without filing them.

    “As far as an explanation, I’m not there yet,” Howes said. “As far as what happened, we’ll get to that. At some point we’re going to hold a meeting so that everybody’s questions can be answered. I think the committee’s questions need to be answered before they read it on the internet.”

    The effort to oust Howes was first reported by New Jersey Globe.

    The Somerset County Republican Party’s downfall coincided with the presidency of Donald Trump, whose gains for Republicans in formerly competitive blue collar areas were offset by stunning losses in middle-class and wealthy suburban counties like Somerset, and whose continued presence on the political stage has allowed Democrats to cement their control.

    “Can he just go away?” Bateman said. “He’s the gift that keeps on giving for Democrats, unfortunately.”

    But Howes’ critics within the GOP don’t believe the party will be in position to stage a comeback under his leadership. The party’s former treasurer, Robert Damiano, resigned on March 30 over the filings with ELEC, according to a letter he sent to Howes.

    “You and I have had conversations regarding the accuracy of the records that I need to file correct ELEC reports. Each time, I was told that I would get all the information that we needed. However, that never happened,” Damiano wrote.

    Howes did not explicitly blame Damiano, but said “we got back control of our records from the former treasurer.”

    “At this point, I took the steps within 24 hours of accepting his resignation of getting a new treasurer with a good reputation, very ethical, hard working and we’ve begun the process of going back to making sure everything was filed.”

    Damiano declined to comment.

    Howes isn’t up for reelection as chair until 2024, and he says there’s no mechanism to remove him. His critics acknowledge it’s not in the party bylaws, but believe that state laws provide a way to remove him.

    Howes said that under his leadership Somerset County Republicans have gained 14 seats at the municipal level and noted that they have performed better in off-year elections, when federal candidates aren’t on the ballot.

    “It’s not your mother’s Somerset County. In a D+10 county we still outperformed both by way of margin and by percentage the deficit,” Howes said. “I’m here to win county races. I didn’t come here to be the nice guy that runs good campaigns but we still don’t win. We came very close in 2021 — very close. We intend to win this year and we’ve been moving forward despite this distraction.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • District Administration Initiates Action Against Former Legislator For Collecting Rent On Encroached Kahcharie land – Kashmir News

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    District Administration Initiates Action Against Former Legislator For Collecting Rent On Encroached Kahcharie land – Kashmir News

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    #District #Administration #Initiates #Action #Legislator #Collecting #Rent #Encroached #Kahcharie #land #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )