Los Angeles Times

Kaiser workers consider strike

As talks stall, unions for 85,000 healthcare employees take steps toward a possible work stoppage.

- By James F. Peltz

With contract talks stalled, unions for health employees will vote on authorizin­g a work stoppage.

Labor unrest is escalating at Kaiser Permanente, with unions for 85,000 of the healthcare giant’s workers saying Friday that they are taking steps toward a potential strike because talks on a new contract had stalled.

The workers — who include most employees who are not doctors, registered nurses or mental health workers — are located throughout Kaiser’s operations in California and several other states. About 55,000 of the employees are in California.

They include licensed vocational nurses; technician­s who work in radiology, Xrays, pharmaceut­icals and other fields; and employees involved with food services and environmen­tal services such as laundry service and room cleaning.

All the 85,000 employees are represente­d by the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, or CKPU, which includes several union locals, including the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union-United Healthcare Workers West local that represents workers in Southern California.

Kaiser’s mental health workers in California are involved in a separate contract dispute with the company.

Their union, the National Union of Healthcare Workers, said this week that its members had rejected Kaiser’s latest offers.

The union also had threatened a strike, but last month it tabled that action as talks continued.

Talks between Kaiser and the CKPU broke off Thursday and no new negotiatio­ns are scheduled, union spokesman Steve Trossman said. The prior contract expired Sept. 30.

As a result, union members will vote in late July or early August on whether to authorize a strike, the union said.

Dennis Dabney, a Kaiser senior vice president for labor relations, said in an emailed statement that the two sides “will continue talking and working toward a mutually beneficial agreement.”

He said that there “has been a great deal of common ground around several major issues” and that Kaiser believes “we have a framework for resolving negotiatio­ns successful­ly.”

The framework includes that Kaiser would “continue to provide market-competitiv­e wages and benefits,” he said.

Kaiser is one of the nation’s largest not-for-profit health plans. It has 12.3 million members, including 4.6 million in Southern California, and nearly $80 billion in annual revenue.

The CKPU said it’s seeking to “protect middle-class jobs with wages and benefits that can support families” but that the company “wants to reduce pay increases for front-line hospital workers and undercut their health benefits and job security.”

The union also said that Kaiser’s executive compensati­on, prices and other financial informatio­n need to be more transparen­t and publicly available.

Trossman said the union wants to restore what had been “a true partnershi­p” with Kaiser, in which both sides worked to “solve problems, figure out innovation­s and ways to deliver care better.” That partnershi­p “has been breaking down in recent years,” he said.

Dabney, meanwhile, said Kaiser “continues to strongly believe in the tremendous value of our long-standing and highly successful partnershi­p” with its employees.

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