Kaiser Permanente and unions for 75,000 striking health workers hit
bargaining snag
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[October 05, 2023]
By Ahmed Aboulenein and Steve Gorman
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Kaiser Permanente and union negotiators for 75,000
striking medical workers suspended a marathon round of contract talks
without a settlement on Wednesday, the two sides said, hours after the
largest such walkout ever in the U.S. healthcare sector commenced.
Kaiser said in a statement released late in the day that tentative
agreements had been reached on a number of unspecified issues and that
the company would "coordinate" with union leaders to "reconvene
bargaining as soon as possible."
But a separate union statement said its team was "awaiting a meaningful
response from Kaiser executives regarding some of our priorities,"
including demands for higher pay and increased hiring to address what
union officials called crisis-level staffing shortages.
No further talks have been scheduled as yet, the union said, adding that
the strike remained in effect.
Word of the stalemate came roughly 10 hours into a planned three-day
walkout by more than 75,000 employees that began at 6 a.m. (1300 GMT)
Wednesday, the deadline union leaders had set for achieving an agreement
that would have averted a strike.
The largest number of workers previously involved in a major work
stoppage of the healthcare sector was 53,000 in 2018, according to the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Those taking to picket lines on Wednesday were nurses, medical
technicians and other support staff at dozens of Kaiser hospitals and
clinics in California, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Virginia and the
District Columbia. Kaiser said its hospitals and emergency departments
remained open, staffed by doctors, managers and "contingency workers."
The break-off in talks capped a round-the-clock bargaining session that
began on Tuesday and ran through much of the day on Wednesday - the
latest round of talks after six months of negotiations. The workers'
previous four-year labor pact expired on Sept. 30.
The union coalition says the company, one of the nation's leading
not-for-profit healthcare networks and managed-care organizations, has
failed to address a prolonged staffing crunch that has left employees
feeling overworked and underpaid while compromising patient care.
The company has acknowledged staffing shortages plaguing the entire
healthcare sector, a consequence of occupational "burnout" from the
COVID-19 pandemic, leading to more than 5 million medical workers
leaving their jobs.
The union said its demand for higher pay was another point of
contention. The company says it leads competitors in total compensation
in every market where Kaiser operates and has offered wage hikes of
12.5% to 16% over four years.
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Healthcare workers strike in front of Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles
Medical Center, as more than 75,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare
workers go on strike from October 4 to 7 across the United States,
in Los Angeles, California, U.S. October 4, 2023. REUTERS/Aude
Guerrucci
"Kaiser executives can end this
strike today if they would just bargain in good faith with frontline
healthcare workers," Christina Andersen, a phlebotomist for 12 years
at a Kaiser clinic in Claremont, California, said earlier in the
day.
Labor unions across the United States have grown bolder in their
demands in the last two years, pressing for higher wages and better
benefits to combat their loss of spending power due to inflation,
and the healthcare sector has emerged in the forefront of that
trend.
Nurses and other medical workers at 11 Tenet Healthcare facilities
across California recently voted to authorize a strike later this
month to spur negotiations with wages and staffing also at issue.
They are represented by the SEIU United Healthcare Workers West.
A separate three-day strike has been threatened in two weeks by an
SEIU local representing 350 nursing home workers at four Los
Angeles-area Brius Healthcare facilities, which union officials say
are plagued by dangerously low staffing levels.
Government data shows 2023 is already the busiest year for strikes
overall since 2019, and that could grow in coming days if
hospitality workers in Las Vegas elect to take action against
casinos, and if auto workers escalate their ongoing strike against
Detroit's big three automakers.
"For the health industry in particular, I think this signifies the
unions' resolve to get proper staffing," said Michael LeRoy, a labor
law professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. "The
reality is that we're in a new era of higher strike activity."
The Kaiser labor coalition, made up of eight unions representing
medical professionals and support staff, insists the company needs
to hire 10,000 new healthcare workers to fill current vacancies.
In Virginia and Washington, D.C., only optometrists and pharmacists
are on strike. The impact on patients in California, Colorado,
Oregon, and part of southwestern Washington state would be greater,
a Kaiser spokeswoman had said on Tuesday.
Kaiser nationwide employs 68,000 nurses and 213,000 technicians,
clerical workers, and administrative staff, alongside its 24,000
doctors.
Nearly 309,700 workers have been involved in work stoppages through
August this year, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein; additional reporting by Bhanvi
Satija; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Shri Navaratnam)
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