Los Angeles Times

Hospital chain to pay millions

Prime Healthcare is ordered to cough up $6.5 million for 500 Southland workers.

- BY NATALIE KITROEFF natalie.kitroeff@latimes.com Twitter: @NatalieKit­ro

Prime Healthcare is ordered to cough up $6.5 million in back wages for 500 Southland workers.

In a ruling last week, the National Labor Relations Board ordered Prime Healthcare Services, the owner of several Southern California hospitals, to pay back wages to laboratory technician­s, clerks and pharmacist­s, among other employees.

The chain owes $6.5 million to 500 workers at Encino Hospital Medical Center and Garden Grove Hospital and Medical Center, according to the union representi­ng them, SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West.

Prime Healthcare had appealed a 2014 ruling by a regional NLRB judge requiring that the company pay employees annual raises they were promised in an expired 2011 contract.

The national labor board affirmed the judge’s decision, noting that the language in the old contract provided for continued raises for employee’s yearly work anniversar­ies, even if the contract was not renewed.

Union officials have been sparring with Prime Healthcare for more than five years over lapsed contracts and the provision of benefits to employees.

In February, a regional NLRB judge ordered Prime Healthcare to recognize a 2014 contract agreement that covers 1,100 employees. Prime has appealed that ruling.

“This is a marker for the workers. It’s a blow against the company, but the pursuit is still about getting the company to recognize the contract vote,” said Sean Wherley, a spokesman for the SEIU-UHW.

In a statement, Prime Healthcare spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Nikels said the company plans to appeal the decision to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and added that the company had given some workers raises in recent years.

“We value the work of all our staff and nurses and their commitment to providing exceptiona­l patient care,” Nikels said.

Prime Healthcare has had a rough year. In May, the Department of Justice joined a lawsuit against the company, which it accused of committing Medicare fraud at 14 California hospitals.

Lawyers for the federal government alleged that the hospitals admitted visitors to the emergency room as inpatients, earning the company “millions of dollars in inflated reimbursem­ents.”

The suit also alleged that Prem Reddy, the India-born founder of the company, would demand that emergency room doctors be fired if they didn’t admit Medicare patients.

In a statement, Prime acknowledg­ed that there is a “lack of clarity between what federal regulators and physicians believe is necessary to adequately document medical necessity for hospital admissions.”

But the company said that it has been successful­ly audited for its Medicare billing practices, and that it is “confident it will prevail and ultimately be exonerated.”

In June, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a Prime Healthcare lawsuit against the SEIUUHW, which claimed the group was extorting the company in an effort to unionize workers at its hospitals.

The suit was dismissed by federal Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel in April 2015.

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