The Denver Post

Over 3,000 Colorado Kaiser front-line workers ready to strike

- By Shelly Fowlkes

Kaiser can’t hide its greed anymore. As an employee who has been working for Kaiser Permanente for more than 30 years, what it is saying to Colorado caregivers is that we are not valued and that we do not matter.

Kaiser has lost its way, and my co-workers and I are standing up to get them back on track.

In health care, our passion is working with patients and consistent­ly coming up with better ways to best deliver care and serve our communitie­s. We put our blood, sweat and tears into working every single day to make Kaiser the best place to receive medical care.

The partnershi­p between workers and Kaiser management

over the last 20 years has been successful in raising the level of compassion­ate care and good jobs in our communitie­s. I remember the days when Kaiser treated its workers with dignity and respect. But now, what we’ve seen is a Kaiser on a very different path.

Despite suffering losses in the Colorado market in prior years, Kaiser, a “nonprofit,” has made $5.2 billion in operating income — commonly known as profit — at the national level in only the first six months of this year. That’s more than Kaiser has made in an entire year, ever.

Kaiser is prioritizi­ng salaries to top executives, boosting the CEO’s salary by 60%, totaling $16 million or almost $8,000 per hour. Growing substantia­lly in recent years, now over 35 executives make over $1 million per year.

For a “nonprofit,” Kaiser is flush with funds to invest in its workforce. But at a time of skyrocketi­ng costs for working people, Kaiser expects more than 3,000 front-line caregivers in Colorado to survive with the lowest raises in decades.

The cost of living in Colorado continues to increase as our wages are falling behind. We are being asked to work longer hours in facilities that are understaff­ed and lacking resources. Kaiser has forgotten that we are the front-line health care workers who are the driving force behind our shared success.

So what’s truly holding Kaiser back from paying wages that workers deserve after years of labor and dedication? Why does Kaiser keep telling caregivers they are paid too much and need to accept lower raises and pay more for our own health care?

The values-based Kaiser that put employees and patients first seems to have eroded, jeopardizi­ng the most successful labormanag­ement partnershi­p in the country. For more than 20 years, our labor-management partnershi­p has improved employee morale, solved problems within the workplace and improved patient care through innovation and a true collaborat­ion.

Today’s Kaiser illegally refused to bargain with us for more than a year. As a result, the National Labor Relations Board issued several complaints against Kaiser for illegal behavior during these negotiatio­ns.

Based on Kaiser’s unfair labor practices and unreasonab­le contract demands, over 3,000 Kaiser workers in Colorado stand on the precipice of a potential strike. If Colorado caregivers go on strike, we will join 85,000 workers nationwide in the largest private-sector U.S. work stoppage in over two decades.

Going on strike is not an easy decision, but for the front-line staff we all depend on to keep us healthy, it is our last resort to ensure dignity at work, good jobs in our communitie­s and great patient care.

Join us in calling upon Kaiser to return to its core values and get back on track in treating front-line workers fairly and delivering high-quality care to our Colorado communitie­s. Justin Mock, Vice President of Finance and CFO; Bill Reynolds, Senior VP, Circulatio­n and Production; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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