Schwarzenegger Drops Legal Fight Over Hospital Staffing
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Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has dropped a yearlong fight with California nurses over hospital staffing levels after a bitter feud that escalated last year when he boasted, "I'm kicking their butts."
Acting on behalf of the governor, California's attorney general Thursday dropped his legal battle over a new state rule requiring one nurse for every five patients. For the past year, Schwarzenegger had been trying to block the rule in favor of a 1-to-6 ratio.
Schwarzenegger's office and Attorney General Bill Lockyer's spokesman had no immediate comment. But a spokeswoman for the CA state Health Department, Sabrina Demayo Lockhart, said that in the 10 months that the 1-to-5 rule has been in place, hospitals have been able to adapt, "so we're going to move forward."
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The governor's action came two days after California voters rejected all of his proposed government-overhaul initiatives and on the same day he took "full responsibility" for the election debacle.
The 1-to-5 staffing ratio was not among the issues decided at the ballot box Tuesday but has been a long-sought goal of the 60,000-member California Nurses Association. Schwarzenegger sided with the hospital industry in opposing the 1-to-5 ratio, citing the added financial burden and the nation's nursing shortage.
Tensions between the governor and the nurses union escalated in December 2004, when he labeled the union a special interest and said he was "kicking their butts."
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Since then, the union has attacked Schwarzenegger in TV commercials, on freeway billboards and at nearly every public event he held, including fundraisers in New York and Boston.
In a September interview with The Associated Press, Schwarzenegger said his comment was a mistake and called the reaction to it a learning experience.