Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

90-Year-Old Elena Griffing Has No Plans To Leave Job She's Had For 70 Years

The Canadian Press, 12 Apr, 2016 10:32 AM
    SAN FRANCISCO — Talk about a loyal employee: Elena Griffing has just celebrated her 70th year working for the same San Francisco Bay Area hospital, and she has no plans to retire anytime soon.
     
    Sutter Health Alta Bates Summit Medical Center has marked Griffing's milestone and her recent 90th birthday, spokeswoman Carolyn Kemp said. But for Griffing, who has held several different positions in her decades of employment, every day on the job is a celebration.
     
    "I can't wait to come to work every day, this is my hospital," she said. "I enjoy anything I can do to be of service. Truly, it's the patient that counts. If it's helping someone, it's my bag."
     
    She isn't kidding.
     
    As if her employment longevity wasn't enough, consider this: She has taken only four days of sick leave in her 70 years of work.
     
    On a Sunday about 15 years ago, she had her appendix removed at the Berkeley facility. The following day, she put on her robe, walked one floor down from her hospital room and got to work.
     
    "It was no big deal," she said. "There was nothing wrong with my hands, I could still type and do what I had to do."
     
    But when the doctor got wind, he sent her home.
     
    Griffing's first day on the job was April 10, 1946, when she was 20. Back then, the facility was called Alta Bates Community Hospital.
     
    She worked there with founder and nurse Alta Alice Miner Bates. In her early years when Bates saw Griffing in the halls of the hospital, she told her to stop wearing her signature 3-inch heels because she might fall and probably would sue the hospital. She has done neither.
     
    "I always got that shaking finger at me, and I was always shaking in my boots when I saw her," she said.
     
    She says she only wears 2 1/2-inch heels now.
     
    Her first job in the hospital was in the laboratory where frogs and rabbits were injected with a woman's urine to determine if she was pregnant. Griffing was the right-hand woman to the pathologist and quickly became an expert at catheterizing frogs.
     
    She also worked with an endocrinologist for 10 years and in the Alta Bates Burn Center for an additional 22 years.
     
    She currently works in patient relations four days a week.
     
    "I don't feel any differently than I did when I was 20. I am truly so lucky," she said.
     
    But times have changed since her first day on the job, when the average wage was $2,500 a year and a gallon of gas cost 15 cents.
     
    "When I started here, I thought I was making such a lot of money, but I think I was making about $120 a month," she said.
     
    She makes enough money now to live a comfortable life in nearby Orinda, enjoying gardening, jazz and coming to work.
     
    If she has her way, she'll keep working "until they throw me out or they carry me out in a box."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar
    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion says he considers Aung San Suu Kyi to be Myanmar's de facto leader, noting she is bound by a "strange rule" in her country's constitution.

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer pushing for a class-action lawsuit over the alleged shortcomings of a popular cold and flu remedy is manufacturing a case with no real complainants, a court has heard.

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker

    B.C. Premier Rejects Calls For Spending Reforms, NDP Seeks Donation Bans

      Clark said she wasn't prepared to make major changes similar to those recently announced by Ontario Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne.

    B.C. Premier Rejects Calls For Spending Reforms, NDP Seeks Donation Bans

    How Did Liberals' Surprise $2Billion Campus Infrastructure Fund Make The Budget Cut?

    How Did Liberals' Surprise $2Billion Campus Infrastructure Fund Make The Budget Cut?
    In a budget that left out a number of marquee Liberal election promises, how did a big-ticket upgrade to university campuses elbow its way into the fiscal plan in only a few months?

    How Did Liberals' Surprise $2Billion Campus Infrastructure Fund Make The Budget Cut?

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite
      He made the announcement after visiting a residence in Trois-Rivieres, where pyrrhotite is a problem in possibly several thousand houses.

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite

    After The Trauma: Halifax Chief Confronts PTSD, Prioritizes Police Mental Health

    After The Trauma: Halifax Chief Confronts PTSD, Prioritizes Police Mental Health
    On November 8, 2008, Jean-Michel Blais stood in front of a collapsed primary school in Haiti, watching as 93 bodies, most of them children, stacked up in front of him.

    After The Trauma: Halifax Chief Confronts PTSD, Prioritizes Police Mental Health