The Labor Day action outside a Kaiser Permanente facility came amid an ongoing strike authorization vote.


Dozens of healthcare workers were arrested in Los Angeles on Monday after sitting in the street outside of a Kaiser Permanente facility to demand that providers address dangerously low staffing levels at hospitals in California and across the country.

The civil disobedience came as the workers prepared for what could be the largest healthcare strike in U.S. history. Late last month, 85,000 Kaiser Permanente employees represented by the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions began voting on whether to authorize a strike over the nonprofit hospital system’s alleged unfair labor practices during ongoing contract negotiations.

The current contract expires on September 30.

“We are burnt out, stretched thin, and fed up after years of the pandemic and chronic short staffing,” Datosha Williams, a service representative at Kaiser Permanente South Bay, said Monday. “Healthcare providers are failing workers and patients, and we are at crisis levels in our hospitals and medical centers.”

“Our employers take in billions of dollars in profits, yet they refuse to safely staff their facilities or pay many of their workers a living wage,” Williams added. “We are prepared to do whatever it takes, even get arrested in an act of civil disobedience, to stand up for our patients.”

Kaiser Permanente reported nearly $3.3 billion in net income during the first half of 2023. In 2021, Kaiser CEO Greg Adams brought in more than $16 million in total compensation.

According to the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, the hospital system “has investments of $113 billion in the U.S. and abroad, including in fossil fuels, casinos, for-profit prisons, alcohol companies, military weapons, and more.”

Healthcare workers, meanwhile, say they’re being overworked and underpaid, and many are struggling to make ends meet amid high costs of living.

“We have healthcare employees leaving left and right, and we have corporate greed that is trying to pretend that this staffing shortage is not real,” Jessica Cruz, a nurse at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center, told LAist.

“We are risking arrest, and the reason why we’re doing it is that we need everyone to know that this crisis is real,” said Cruz, who was among the 25 workers arrested during the Labor Day protest.

A recent survey of tens of thousands of healthcare workers across California found that 83% reported understaffing in their departments, and 65% said they have witnessed or heard of care being delayed or denied due to staff shortages.

Additionally, more than 40% of the workers surveyed said they feel pressured to neglect safety protocols and skip breaks or meals due to short staffing.

“It’s heartbreaking to see our patients suffer from long wait times for the care they need, all because Kaiser won’t put patient and worker safety first,” Paula Coleman, a clinical laboratory assistant at Kaiser Permanente in Englewood, Colorado, said in a statement late last month. “We will have no choice but to vote to strike if Kaiser won’t bargain in good faith and let us give patients the quality care they deserve.”

A local NBC affiliate reported Monday that 99% of Colorado Kaiser employees represented by SEIU Local 105 have voted to authorize a strike.


  • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I’m confused about how a non profit can have billions in net income, I guess idk how that stuff works?

    Kaiser is a little progressive for an insurance company where they put a ton of focus on prevention. Early testing and all that, because it does cost less in the long run. I hope they can also be more progressive with how they treat their staff!