PNASC: A Look Back … through the years
By Leticia C. Jue
Updated by Warlie Galzote
Finding solace in hearing one’s tongue spoken by someone who, until a moment ago, was but another stranger; mingling with like souls for a measure of warmth in an alien land; cracking up over some silly old anecdote, belching out faintly remembered lines from tunes of childhood years.
They were a tightly-knit little group, toasting each other’s little triumphs, offering comfort through tough times, welcoming the newly-arrived.
Amid such ambience, they marked the quiet beginning of what is today a significant force that generates a positive impact in the lives of many. At 1047 S. Tremaine, home of Blas and Angelina Torres, 15 expatriate Filipino nurses turned another social gathering on October 1, 1960 into the Filipino Nurses Club of Southern California.
Their objectives: education, cultural enrichment, and serving as resource to Filipino nurses. Public Health Supervisor/Educator Juanita Virgilio Inocencio, now deceased, was its founding president (1961-1963). Under the next president, Fe Behringer (1963-65), the club was awarded scholarships and reached out to newly arrived Foreign Nurse Graduates (FNG) under the U.S.
Exchange Visitors Program to ease the nursing shortage brought on by the Vietnam War. Administrator/Educator Delia Buncio Goggins served as President for the next three consecutive terms (1965-1970). It was during her term, that the Filipino Nurses Club was renamed Philippine Nurses Association of Southern California (PNASC), a chapter of the Philippine Nurses Association Philippines.
The following served as subsequent presidents: Amparo Soozi Sauz (1971- 1972); Corazon Luna Hall (1973-1975); Delia Goggins, her fourth term, (1976-1978).
Membership hovered around 100 with friends and families supporting its social/fundraising events. Advocacy on a national level began with a petition to President Jimmy Carter, raised funds in support of the two Filipino nurses (Narciso & Perez) who were charged of negligence in Chicago A growing influx of immigrant nurses swelled. FNGs were required to take licensing examination.
The passing rate was a dismal 10%. President Maria Pablico (1979-1980) and Fely de la Cruz offered sorely needed licensure exam review classes, but to no avail.
During D. Goggin’s 5th term as president (1981-1982), as PNASC hosted the 85 Philippine delegates to the 17th International Council of Nursing Congress; the State Department of Consumer Affairs (DCA) Central Testing Unit revealed that the 40-year old National League of Nursing test pool adversely affected the FNGs.
A second study found that the tests failed to meet Federal Testing Standards, thus were invalid. In response, hundreds of FNGs picketed and testified at the Board of Registered Nursing (BRN) hearings, sent petitions to legislators, did media interviews in support for BRNs push for new, unbiased tests.
Educators Leticia Catacutan Jue, Mierfe Calica, Elsie Fontanilla and Delia Goggins led PNASCs relentless campaign to extend the unrealistic six months FNG Interim Permit (IP) which required immediate deportation upon failure to pass the exam within that period.
The BRN authorized review of all tests to determine appropriateness, detect bias and construction flaws, and demanded rescoring based on these results.
This initiative was opposed by mainstream U.S. students/ graduates; Deans/Directors; American Nurses Association and California Nurses Association who contended that the reviewing/re-scoring and extending interim permits would lower patient care standards.
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