Los Angeles Times

Kaiser workers set date to strike

Unions representi­ng 80,000 members will walk out on Oct. 14.

- By Suhauna Hussain

Unions representi­ng more than 80,000 Kaiser Permanente workers said their members will participat­e in a weeklong strike starting Oct. 14 to protest the company’s labor practices.

The healthcare giant’s workers will strike in California and five other states as well as the District of Columbia, the unions said. The strike will affect employees with jobs as optometris­ts, a variety of technician­s, clinical laboratory scientists, housekeepe­rs and hundreds of other positions — largely those who are not doctors, registered nurses or mental health workers.

A coalition of Kaiser Permanente unions announced the move in a news release Monday. With more than 80,000 workers, the October strike would be one of the biggest since 185,000 Teamsters went on strike at United Parcel Service in 1997, the coalition said.

Contracts expired at the end of September 2018, and unrest escalated in July when talks between the coalition and Kaiser stalled. Unions said they would take steps toward a potential strike. Kaiser employees and families marched through Oakland on Labor Day.

“Kaiser Permanente is supposed to serve the public interest in exchange for not paying income taxes and little to nothing in property taxes — an estimated tax break of more than $2.3 billion over the last two years. But in recent years, the corporatio­n has departed from its community-oriented mission,” the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions said in the release.

Kaiser Permanente Chief Executive Bernard J. Tyson issued a statement complainin­g that the union was setting a strike date despite active negotiatio­ns Monday as “an overt effort to gain leverage in bargaining.”

Kaiser is “committed to offering a package that’s aligned with all of our other unions that keeps our employees among the best paid in wages and benefits in the industry. We are committed to our workforce who delivers on our mission every day and to our members’ demand for greater affordabil­ity of care and coverage from Kaiser Permanente,” Tyson said.

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