The Bakersfield Californian

Kaiser Permanente, unions reach labor deal to avert strike

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LOS ANGELES — An alliance of unions representi­ng 50,000 Kaiser Permanente workers in California, Oregon and six other states called off a strike notice after reaching a tentative labor deal Saturday with the health care network.

The Alliance of Health Care Unions and Kaiser Permanente jointly announced the agreement, staving off a potentiall­y crippling strike in which 32,000 employees, most of them in Southern California, threatened to walk off the job this coming Monday to protest understaff­ing and wage cuts for new hires.

Additional members of the alliance, comprised of 21 local unions, authorized a one-day “sympathy strike” on Nov. 18.

Agreement on the fouryear contract includes annual wage increases, while maintainin­g health benefits for employees, and new staffing language to continue to protect employees and patients, the statement said.

“This agreement will mean patients will continue to receive the best care, and Alliance members will have the best jobs,” said Hal Ruddick, executive director of the alliance. “This contract protects our patients, provides safe staffing, and guarantees fair wages and benefits for every Alliance member.”

Christian Meisner, the chief human resources officer at Kaiser Permanente, said the agreement “underscore­s our unwavering commitment to our employees by maintainin­g industry-leading wages and benefits.”

Bargaining continues with the local units representi­ng Kaiser pharmacist­s in Northern California and the Pacific Northwest, as well as a group of engineers.

“We hope to reach agreements very soon,” Kaiser spokesman Steve Shivinsky said.

The alliance said it has more than 35,000 member employees in California; 6,300 in Oregon and Washington; 2,100 in Colorado; 2,300 in Maryland, Washington, D.C. and northern Virginia; 3,000 in Georgia; and 1,900 in Hawaii.

OAKLAND — A $10,000 reward is being offered for informatio­n leading to the arrest of the shooter responsibl­e for killing a toddler on a San Francisco Bay Area highway.

The 1-year-old boy, Jasper Wu, was sleeping in his car seat when he was struck by a stray bullet on Interstate 880 in Oakland on Nov. 6.

He would have turned two next month.

The California Highway Patrol said the evidence suggests Wu’s mother got caught driving in the crossfire of a gunfight on the freeway.

“Protecting its citizens serves as the government’s fundamenta­l responsibi­lity, and if the death of this toddler, on his way home with his family, doesn’t wake us up to the out-ofcontrol crime in Oakland, I don’t know what will,” Carl Chan, president of Oakland Chinese Chamber of Commerce chamber, said Friday.

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