SEIU 49 to Kaiser management: RESPECT US, STAFF US, PAY US!

LOCAL BARGAINING HAS BEGUN!

We kicked off local bargaining on May 9 with the strong message to management that it is time they start walking the walk instead of just talking the talk, by giving us the wages and staffing that we deserve. Our upcoming local bargaining dates are: May 23, June 6, June 20, July 11, and July 25. 


NATIONAL BARGAINING SESSION 2

National Bargaining Session 2 continued our talks on how to address the staffing crisis, discussed Kaiser’s finances and Kaiser’s recent announcement to acquire Geisinger Health and start a new company called Risant.

Kaiser Company & Employee Finances

Most of the second day was on finances: Kaiser’s finances, the finances of the workforce in a time of unprecedented inflation, and the finances of our pension fund.

  • KP Finances. Kaiser CFO Kathy Lancaster and Senior VP Tom Curtin presented the challenges they see ahead in growing the membership, getting proper reimbursement for care, and managing rising expenses. We presented a counter perspective that emphasized Kaiser’s incredibly strong financial position when viewed over the last five years and highlighted Kaiser’s astounding investment income and management costs, spiraling executive compensation, and skyrocketing payments to expensive outside contractors. Even though Kaiser lost money in 2022, it was an outlier, not the trend. Kaiser reported more than $21 billion in profit over the last five years, and their net worth doubled between 2018 and 2022 to $58.9B. Kaiser isn’t a company that’s struggling.

Inflation is hurting all Kaiser Permanente employees but especially those paid less than $25/hr

  • Employee finances. We also wanted to ensure that Kaiser management understood that they are not the only ones who have to manage a budget. Every Kaiser worker is struggling to adjust their family budget to rising costs of living. Shamefully, Kaiser employs thousands of workers across the country who don’t make a $25/hr living wage. 

  • Pension fund. Some good news that came out of this dialogue was the reporting that the KP pension plan is fully funded for the first time in decades. We also asked for and received a commitment from KP leaders for greater transparency around both our pension fund and our 403b investments.


Coalition Addressing the Staffing Crisis

The session began with a report back from the labor-management task force working on getting 10,000 new hires into Coalition vacancies by the end of the year. A timeline for meetings and subgroups was created to address internal delays in the bidding and hiring system, market limitations for harder to fill classifications, collaboration about high-volume hiring opportunities, and providing union leaders in the facilities input into core staffing modules.
Our bargaining team is fully committed to solving the staffing crisis by raising healthcare worker pay, including a $25/hr minimum, fixing our broken hiring process, and making a massive investment in education and training. 


Kaiser is buying a health system in Pennsylvania – we have a lot of questions!

We called Kaiser out on the acquisition they announced last month of a Pennsylvania medical group called Geisinger Health and the creation of Risant, a new healthcare company. With the announcement, Kaiser not only failed to discuss this plan with its unions, but we learned that Kaiser’s top leaders at the Medical Group weren’t even involved in the deal!

What’s most frustrating about this is that they’re spending billions buying up companies while saying they can’t afford to raise our wages enough to keep up with inflation. 

Kaiser’s behavior around the Geisinger acquisition has raised critical questions:

  1. Is Kaiser going to use California rate increases to pay for the acquisition?

  2. Does it plan to start growing a non-union, non-partnership company within Kaiser that will create pressure to lower the standards of living for all of us?

  3. If they didn’t talk to their labor partners or even their doctors, what is it they’re trying to hide?

No matter what comes out of the rest of bargaining this round, we have to be ready to act until we get the contract and respect we deserve. If Kaiser thinks this is partnership, we need to prove them wrong.

Our next National Bargaining Session will be held June 22–24. Stay tuned for updates, and make sure you have opted in to receive text and email alerts and that your email and phone are up to date!


COMING UP: SHOW OUR UNION STRENGTH!

Purple up every Tuesday and Thursday until we win a fair contract!
Bargaining team members will be heading to all campuses to hand out purple swag for our Purple Up days and upcoming actions. Contact your Contract Action Team (CAT) member or Bargaining Team representative if you have not received your purple swag. 

  1. Sticker up for respect!
    Wear your stickers every day from May 22–May 26 and join our sisters and brothers in the Coalition to show our union solidarity! Let Kaiser know that we will not be left in line, left behind, or left on hold! Working from home? Download the virtual background for your online meetings or sticker image for your profile.

  2. Stay tuned for bargaining updates and news about upcoming actions:

    1. Follow the most up to date information on bargaining by joining our Facebook page.

    2. Opt in or update your information to receive text and email updates from SEIU Local 49.

    3. Talk to your CAT member and co-workers; knowledge is power! 

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Kaiser, Keep Your Promises! ​

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SEIU 49 Members Testify in Salem on Behalf of Safer Staffing in Oregon Hospitals