Marin Independent Journal

LA County doctors, dentists vote to authorize labor strike

- By Emily Alpert Reyes Distribute­d by Tribune News Service.

Physicians and dentists working at Los Angeles County-run hospitals and clinics have voted to authorize a possible strike, citing concerns about inadequate benefits and rampant vacancies.

The Union of American Physicians and Dentists represents more than 1,100 county employees in two bargaining units that gave the green light for a walkout after two weeks of voting. The workers authorized a strike in the event that their negotiatin­g committee determined it was necessary, the union said.

The union did not announce strike dates and such an action is not guaranteed to go forward, but the vote brings its members a step closer to a walkout that could affect a range of county facilities — not just the hospitals run by the county. Among the workers represente­d by the UAPD are psychiatri­sts working in L.A. County jails, where labor leaders said vacancy rates for such profession­als had run as high as 70%.

With so many vacancies, “we cannot provide adequate care to inmates with unmet medical and psychiatri­c needs,” said Dr. Gary Pedneault, a psychiatri­st at a county jail for women, in a statement.

L.A. County-run hospitals are also facing a possible strike by SEIU-United Service Workers West, whose members work for companies contracted by the county to clean and sanitize the public hospitals.

SEIU-USWW said it had notified the county Tuesday that more than 700 environmen­tal services workers could go on strike as soon as Dec. 6. “This is not a decision we take lightly,” the union said in a letter, but “our members can not continue to be treated like

a second class in their place of work.”

Both groups have raised concerns about benefits and understaff­ing: UAPD members have faulted what they say are inadequate benefits for making it difficult to attract and retain physicians. Some physicians said they had to work long hours while pregnant to pad their maternity leave and have more time to bond with their babies.

L.A. County offers more extensive “Megaflex” benefits to some other county employees, but “the healthcare workers of Los Angeles who are the linchpin of the healthcare system ... are not being allowed to have that,” said Dr. Stuart Bussey, president of the UAPD, calling it “unfair.”

“We need good health benefits to fix this recruitmen­t and retention problem,” Bussey said.

The L.A. County Department of Health Services did not promptly respond to questions about vacancy rates for medical profession­als in its facilities. In a statement, it said the doctors and dentists represente­d by the union “already have an extensive benefits package in place” that includes “comprehens­ive medical, dental, and leave benefits among numerous other provisions.”

County officials have estimated that providing “Megaflex” benefits to all UAPD members in the two bargaining units would cost at least $86.8 million annually. That cost “would make it prohibitiv­e to consider such investment­s in wages and incentives by specialty, location and other hardto-recruit roles for patient care,” Department of Health Services director Dr. Christina Ghaly warned county supervisor­s.

UAPD officials said they dispute the cost estimate and are seeking another one. Besides physicians and dentists working for the L.A. County Department of Health Services, the UAPD members weighing a strike include people employed at the Department of Mental Health, Public Health, and the Medical Examiner, among others.

The Department of Health Services said in a statement earlier this month that it was optimistic that negotiatio­ns with the UAPD would “ultimately result in a fair and amicable agreement that safeguards patient care, values healthcare workers and enhances physician recruitmen­t and retention in County service.”

 ?? FRANCINE ORR — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Dozens of physicians, dentists and psychiatri­sts demonstrat­e outside the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administra­tion in Los Angeles on Nov. 7.
FRANCINE ORR — LOS ANGELES TIMES Dozens of physicians, dentists and psychiatri­sts demonstrat­e outside the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administra­tion in Los Angeles on Nov. 7.

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