2025 Session Last amended: 2023 session

§ 181.275 — Regulating Nurses' Overtime

Plain-Language Summary

Minnesota prohibits hospitals and licensed health care facilities from punishing a nurse who refuses to work overtime beyond a normal 12-hour shift when the nurse believes extra hours would put patients at risk. The only exception is during a genuine emergency such as a natural disaster or disease outbreak.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a nurse at a hospital or licensed health care facility is asked to work beyond a normal work period of 12 or fewer consecutive hours. Who this affects: Nurses as defined in section 148.171, including state-employed nurses. Key points: Your employer cannot fire, discipline, threaten, or report you to the Board of Nursing solely because you declined extra consecutive hours when you believe patient safety would be at risk. This protection does not apply during emergencies (terrorism, disease outbreaks, severe weather, natural disasters). Collective bargaining rights are not diminished by this section. This does not apply to nursing facilities, ICFs for persons with developmental disabilities, boarding care facilities, or housing with services establishments.