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Strike

Los Angeles — Tens of thousands of health care workers in the United States walked off the job on Wednesday, beginning one of the sector’s largest strikes in recent history, as America’s year of labor discontent rolled on.

The walkout of more than 75 000 workers at Kaiser Permanente, the country’s largest non-profit health care organization, comes as surging inflation has spurred industrial action across the US, from Hollywood actors to Detroit auto workers.

People on the picket lines in Los Angeles on Wednesday said they were underpaid and overworked.

“Ever since the pandemic hit, we lost a lot of members and we never recovered them,” X-ray technician Armando Velasco told AFP.

“And now we’re at the brink, we’re at the precipice.”

This morning at 6 a.m. Pacific health care workers at Kaiser Permanente walked out on strike.

75,000 workers just launched the biggest strike the U.S. health care industry has ever seen. pic.twitter.com/0646ATKkY2

— More Perfect Union (@MorePerfectUS) October 4, 2023

Nurse Kathy Lozoya said the rocketing cost of living in southern California was making life very difficult.

“Kaiser Permanente has reported billions of dollars in profits, so all we’re asking from Kaiser CEOs is to share those profits with the frontline workers,” she said.

“All we’re asking is a fair contract so that we can be able to live.”

Fellow nurse Scarleth Rocha said she feared a staff shortage was not good for patients.

“Working 12-hour shifts, working with 26 patients per one nurse is not ideal, and it’s not safe for nurses to work with that many patients in one place,” she said.

Kaiser Permanente locations in California, Colorado, Oregon and Washington state were expected to be affected by the three-day strike. A small number of workers in Washington, DC and Virginia were set to walk out for 24 hours.

Kaiser said centers would remain open, but warned there would be “longer-than-usual” wait times.

Health care giant Kaiser Permanente refused to meet workers’ needs, and is hiring scabs instead.

With 75,000 union members on strike units with over 100 workers are now being staffed by 11 scabs.

Armando Velasco told us all about it. pic.twitter.com/tZn6bElClg

— More Perfect Union (@MorePerfectUS) October 4, 2023

A Kaiser spokesman told journalists on Tuesday that talks were continuing.

“Several agreements over specific provisions have been reached” with the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, the spokesman said, adding negotiators were prepared to meet around the clock “until we reach a fair and equitable agreement.”

The union, which says this will be the largest health care worker strike in US history, is pushing for pay increases and protections against subcontracting and outsourcing of labor.

It has threatened to engage in further strike action in November “if Kaiser continues to commit unfair labor practices.”

Inflationary pressures

Wednesday’s strike comes during a year in which the US has seen an unusually high level of industrial action as workers struggle with inflation levels not seen in a generation.

Higher prices have reduced the purchasing power of shoppers across the country, while the rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI) has led to concerns about the automation of growing numbers of jobs.

Industrial action is ongoing in Detroit, where the United Auto Workers (UAW) union is engaged in its first-ever joint strike action against the “Big Three” auto makers – GM, Ford and Chrysler maker Stellantis – in a push for higher pay and better working conditions.

More than 25 000 workers are on strike in 21 states – around 17 percent of UAW’s 146 000 members – as talks continue.

And in Hollywood, a months-long joint strike by writers and actors brought California’s lucrative film industry to a halt, stopping production and broadcast of major movie and TV productions.

While the writers have since agreed on a deal to return to work, actors represented by the SAF-AFTRA union were on the picket lines Wednesday, even as their negotiators met with studios for a second full day of talks.

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Source: AFP 

Picture: X/@SEIU

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