Kaiser, nurses union spar over workers as strike enters 3rd week – The Mercury News Today Us News


As the strike at Kaiser Permanente expands to include thousands more workers in its third week, union representatives for 34,000 employees and the health care giant remain far apart on the issues, leaving patients in a lurch.

Michael Nestor, a retired emergency room doctor with Kaiser, is upset with the company’s entire medical system. The 74-year-old Huntington Beach resident suffers from two medical conditions he characterizes as life-threatening. Neither is being treated urgently as the strike continues.

“That claim is false,” according to a UNAC/UHCP statement. “Our union has not threatened, intimidated, or retaliated against caregivers. Suggesting otherwise is inaccurate and designed to create fear and confusion rather than address the conditions that forced caregivers to take this lawful action.”

Claudia Mayorga, a pharmacy assistant at a Kaiser facility on Dalen Street in Downey, doesn’t buy Kaiser’s claims that striking nurses are returning to work.

“I haven’t heard anything like that happening in our facility,” said Mayorga, who joined the strike this week. “No one has crossed picket lines. The strike is important for all of us, for our future. I’m very disappointed that Kaiser isn’t coming to the bargaining table.”

The central refilling facility where she works employs roughly 200 people and handles mail orders and other prescription refill orders for Kaiser facilities in the western United States.

Also see: 3,000 pharmacy and lab workers will join Kaiser’s nurses strike

Ahead of the walkout by 3,000 pharmacy and lab workers represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers on Monday, Kaiser sent out text messages to its members in California and Hawaii saying the strike would affect lab services and cause delays in patient care.

Some members have become frustrated with long lines forming at the Kaiser pharmacies.

One interaction shared in a TikTok video posted last week showed a pharmacy customer questioning a Kaiser employee at the Riverside Kaiser pharmacy in an exchange that grew so tense a security guard was called to calm the situation. Another video on Instagram at Kaiser Baldwin Park showed long lines at the facility’s pharmacy.

The striking UFCW locals in Southern California, who gave a 10-day notice of their intent to strike on Jan. 29, represent Kaiser employees who work as pharmacy assistants, pharmacy technicians, clinical lab scientists, medical lab technicians, and clinical and administrative workers at Southern California medical facilities.

The contract covering UFCW pharmacy employees in the region expired Nov. 1, while the contract covering UFCW clinical and medical laboratory specialists expired Feb. 1.

Kaiser and the UNAC/UHCP are negotiating to replace a five-year contract for 31,000 members that expired Sept. 30. The union is striking for higher wages and benefits, and wants more employees hired to fill staffing shortages. It initially sought a 38% pay hike over four years and is now seeking a 25% raise. Kaiser has offered a 21.5% hike over four years.

Michael Nestor, left, and wife Diana Patton-Nestor of Huntington Beach, on May 10, 2020. Michael Nestor,  a retired emergency room doctor with Kaiser medical center in Irvine, is upset with the entire medical system. The 74-year-old Huntington Beach resident is suffering from two medical conditions that he can't get treated for immediately, and that he characterizes as life-threatening. He wants to see the current strike end soon. (Photo Courtesy of Michael Nestor)
Michael Nestor, left, and wife Diana Patton-Nestor of Huntington Beach, on Mother’s Day in 2020. Michael Nestor,  a retired emergency room doctor with Kaiser medical center in Irvine, is upset with the entire medical system. The 74-year-old Huntington Beach resident is suffering from two medical conditions that he can’t get treated for immediately, and that he characterizes as life-threatening. He wants to see the current strike end soon. (Photo Courtesy of Michael Nestor) 

 




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