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Kaiser Permanente Reaches Deal With Workers

The tentative agreement was reached Saturday morning between unions and the health care company, averting a strike.
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Kaiser workers strike
KAISER NURSES AND SUPPORTERS AT AN OCTOBER RALLY./TIM TRAUTMAN/OREGON PUBLIC BROADCASTING
November 16, 2021

Thousands of Kaiser Permanente employees in Oregon and Southwest Washington will not strike on Monday after a tentative agreement was reached Saturday morning between unions and the health care company.

According to Kaiser Permanente, a new 4-year contract was negotiated with Alliance of Health Care Unions, which is a collective of unions that in total represents 52,000 Kaiser workers, including about 3,400 nurses and other health professionals working for Kaiser in Oregon and Southwest Washington. The local nurses and health workers’ contract expired on Sept. 30.

The Oregon Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals previously said Alliance union members had planned to go on strike Monday at 6 a.m., after giving Kaiser 10 days’ notice, as required by law.

Union leaders say the tentative agreement gets rid of a proposed two-tier pay system, which would have paid new hires between 25 and 40 percent less than other employees doing the same jobs.

“I’m really happy we have an [agreement],” said Shane Burley of OFNHP. “It was a really long fight. It only happened because we basically put forth the largest health care strike in American history.”

Kaiser described the new contract as one that will continue to “reward our employees and address health care affordability.”

A press release from the workers unions said the deal includes higher wages, racial justice improvements, and a staffing committee that will address staffing shortages.

The contract is still pending ratification by the Alliance unions, but the planned strikes have been canceled. Voting by union members on the tentative agreement is expected to happen over the next several weeks and if the agreement is ratified, it will have an effective date of Oct. 1.

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