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Kaiser Permanente staff picket as possible strike looms

Union demands include help with staffing shortages

By Molly Solomon, OPB
Published: July 25, 2019, 8:31pm

Health workers holding picket signs rallied Tuesday evening in Vancouver as contract negotiations between nonprofit health care provider Kaiser Permanente and a coalition of unions remained stalled. The unions represent 85,000 of Kaiser’s employees nationwide, including 4,500 in Oregon and Southwest Washington.

More than 50 employees represented by Service Employees International Union Local 49 lined the sidewalk outside Kaiser’s Cascade Park Medical Office in east Vancouver.

“I’m fighting for my pension, my pay raises, my time off,” said Lisa Pharmeter, a dental assistant at the Cascade Park campus and one of more than 50 Service Employees International Union Local 49 members who protested in east Vancouver Tuesday.

“We take care of the patients, and it’s super important for us to be compensated for that in a reasonable manner.”

SEIU’s local contract with Kaiser expired on June 30, but was extended through the end of July. If an agreement isn’t met, union members say they’re prepared to vote on a strike.

“Kaiser has yet to be willing to agree to terms of a new national agreement or terms that our members feel like address what people are most concerned about,” said SEIU Local 49 president Meg Niemi.

Union demands include higher pay, more jobs to address staffing shortages and greater transparency at the executive leadership level.

Niemi said the union wants to restore a “true equal partnership” with Kaiser, one in which members feel like they have a voice in their jobs.

“Our members have really made Kaiser very successful over the last 20 years,” Niemi said. “We want to make sure that if we’re engaging in that labor management partnership, it’s not lopsided towards management, that it’s an equal partnership.”

Labor unions claim management are offering pay increases below the area’s cost of living rate, eliminating pensions for new employees, and have made staffing cuts that are impacting their ability to provide high quality customer care.

“That is suffering now due to short staffing,” said Cliff Pfenning, a patient registration representative at Cascade Park who has worked with Kaiser for 18 years. He is also on the SEIU Local 49 executive board. “We are concerned that our patients won’t get the same quality care.”

In an emailed statement, regional spokesman Michael Foley said Kaiser has a framework for resolving negotiations successfully. Kaiser employs 13,500 people in Oregon and Southwest Washington.

Strike authorization votes will begin Aug. 6 and end by Aug. 23.

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