Los Angeles Times

County physicians and dentists ready to strike

Doctors union plans a Dec. 27 walkout at government facilities over what it says are inadequate benefits and rampant vacancies.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

Physicians and dentists working at Los Angeles County-run hospitals, clinics and other county facilities have made plans to go on strike shortly after Christmas to protest what their union describes as inadequate benefits and dire vacancies.

The Union of American Physicians and Dentists said Wednesday that it had set a Dec. 27 date for a walkout after more than two years of negotiatio­ns had failed to address concerns among doctors, dentists and other county employees who recently authorized a strike.

Chief among those concerns are the benefits offered to county physicians and other medical profession­als, which the UAPD argues have failed to make the county an attractive employer.

For instance, the union said it has been especially difficult to recruit and retain female staff due to insufficie­nt benefits for people recovering from childbirth. Doctors said they have had to work extra hours while pregnant in order to extend their maternity leaves.

The result of such deficienci­es, the union said, has been alarming levels of vacancies for medical profession­als in some county facilities. The UAPD said that in the county’s jails, the vacancy rate for psychiatri­sts has reached 70%.

Its negotiatin­g team called on the county to engage in “intense mediation” to prevent a strike that “could have significan­t repercussi­ons on medical services provided in the hospitals, jails, juvenile facilities, and beyond.”

The L.A. County Chief Executive Office said in a statement that it values the medical workers but was disappoint­ed with the “threat to strike.” The county says it will file an unfair labor practice charge based primarily on “the potential of an unlawful economic strike and the union’s failure to engage in good faith negotiatio­ns,” the office said.

“We do agree with the union that it is essential we do everything possible to resolve these negotiatio­ns, including mediation — a process that the county strongly supports,” the office said.

The L.A. County Department of Health Services, which employs the bulk of the medical profession­als who could participat­e in a walkout, said in a statement last month that it was optimistic that bargaining between the county and the union would result in “a fair and amicable agreement that safeguards patient care, values healthcare workers and enhances physician recruitmen­t and retention in County service.”

It said the physicians and dentists “already have an extensive benefits package in place,” the same one as more than 35,000 other county workers.

The UAPD wants medical profession­als to get the

more extensive “Megaflex” plan that’s available to some L.A. County employees.

The union argued that the upgrade would represent only a 0.04% hike in the county budget — roughly $20 million annually — but county officials have estimated it would cost at least $86.8 million a year, with the expense rising further with any negotiated increase in salaries.

The Department of Health Services “does not believe that expansion of benefits, including Megaflex, in a non-targeted manner is best for physician recruitmen­t and retention nor do we believe it is in the interest of our patients and taxpayers,” its director, Dr. Christina Ghaly, argued in a report to county supervisor­s.

Ghaly also said the pricier benefits package would make it “prohibitiv­e” for the county to consider “investment­s in wages and incentives by specialty, location and other hard-to-recruit roles for patient care.”

Other UAPD-represente­d employees who could go on strike include medical and veterinary profession­als at the Department­s of Mental Health, Public Health and the Medical Examiner, among other county department­s.

Union members plan to picket Thursday outside Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, a county-run hospital in Sylmar, in preparatio­n for the possible strike.

Union officials said they are negotiatin­g with the county over which employees will remain on the job during a walkout to maintain crucial services.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? DR. GARY PEDNEAULT speaks at a news conference in Los Angeles last month on behalf of unionized health profession­als working for L.A. County.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times DR. GARY PEDNEAULT speaks at a news conference in Los Angeles last month on behalf of unionized health profession­als working for L.A. County.
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? THE UNION says “intense mediation” might resolve issues with the county and prevent a Dec. 27 walkout.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times THE UNION says “intense mediation” might resolve issues with the county and prevent a Dec. 27 walkout.

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