Oregon State Hospital nurses raise safety fears as they work mandatory overtime

Maggie Simpkins, a registered nurse at Oregon State Hospital, talks about her job on Friday, Aug. 9, 2024. Nurses are concerned about excessive mandatory overtime and burnout. (Ben Botkin/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

Maggie Simpkins starts her workweek at 6:30 a.m. Sundays at Oregon State Hospital, where the registered nurse dispenses medication to patients, goes over their treatment plans and maps out the day’s schedule, including appointments, meals and care.

Her shift is supposed to end at 5 p.m. But most Sundays, Simpkins has to work mandatory overtime, which can stretch until about 10 p.m.

For Simpkins and her colleagues, mandatory overtime has caused a wave of fear and concern about the exhaustion compromising safety for staff and more than 500 patients at the state-run psychiatric hospital in Salem. Oregon’s American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees , which represents about 300 registered nurses at the hospital, has filed 225 grievances on their behalf in the last four weeks, alleging the mandatory overtime violates their labor agreement and the state’s nurse staffing law.

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