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Union Calls Strike at Kaiser Site

Mental health workers on Dec. 16 set up a picket line outside Kaiser Permanente’s Panorama City Medical Center to strike against inadequate staffing numbers, as well as poor retirement and health benefits. The statewide strike, involving more than 4,000 workers and led by the National Union of Healthcare Workers, continued through Dec. 20. Large rallies took place on Dec. 17 at Kaiser’s Oakland and Los Angeles centers, with the Oakland march ending at Kaiser headquarters. The union strike was planned originally for Nov. 11 to 15, but was postponed following the death of Bernard Tyson, chief executive of Kaiser Permanente. Mental health clinicians have not had a contract since September 2018, according to Stacy Cohen, a mental health care manager at Kaiser’s medical center on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. Hospitals and medical offices remained open the entire week: “Anyone in need of urgent mental health or other care will receive the services they require. Where necessary, we will call members to reschedule some non-urgent appointments,” Annie Russell, chief operating officer of Southern California Kaiser Permanente Medical Group, said in an emailed statement. “We have been jointly working with an external, neutral mediator to help us reach a collective bargaining agreement with the National Union of Healthcare Workers,” Russell said in Kaiser’s statement. “The mediator recently delivered a proposed compromise to both sides that we are seriously considering; however, the union has rejected it and announced plans to strike instead.” In addition to the wage issue, Kaiser also refused to restore pensions for mental health clinicians during negotiations that it “unilaterally rescinded” in 2015, the union said in a statement from October. “They wanted to come back to the negotiating table, but they had a lot of conditions in order for us to come back, so at that point we said this has gone on for too long,” Cohen told the Business Journal, while striking at the health organization’s Panorama City location. “We’re definitely open to going back to the bargaining table; we want to go back to work, but we want a fair contract.” In addition to Panorama City, picket lines were set up at five other Kaiser locations in Southern California.

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