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Kaiser, Union Coalition Enter 5-Year Collaborative Contract

Labor: Unprecedented partnership would guarantee job security, annual raises and role in staffing decisions.

September 26, 2000|NANCY CLEELAND and SHARON BERNSTEIN, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Kaiser Permanente and a coalition of unions have agreed to an unprecedented five-year national contract that will raise pay, guarantee job security to 62,000 workers and strengthen their role in staffing decisions that affect patient care.

The contract, to be announced today at a press briefing by AFL-CIO President John Sweeney and Kaiser Foundation Chairman David Lawrence, involves 25 union locals representing nurses, clerks, housekeepers and cafeteria workers.


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"With this agreement, Kaiser Permanente is creating industry standards for collaboration among all its employees on behalf of enhanced patient care," Sweeney said in a statement prepared for the briefing. "It represents a challenge and a prod, and it will inevitably improve the practices of all health-care organizations."

Oakland-based Kaiser Permanente is the largest health maintenance organization in California, and the second-largest in the nation.

Three years ago, it entered a partnership with the AFL-CIO under which the labor federation agreed to help market the health plan and Kaiser Permanente ensured that new facilities would be unionized. This contract, which has been ratified by nearly all the unions involved, is an outgrowth of that partnership.

All workers covered will receive at least 4% annual raises. Wages for registered nurses will increase by 6% a year. In addition, union members will be eligible for bonuses if certain goals--including improved patient satisfaction and reduced medical errors--are met. The contract also guarantees no layoffs unless an entire Kaiser Permanente facility closes.

Coming after years of bottom-line thinking in the health care industry, the emphasis on quality of care and service is significant and could inspire changes in the way HMOs are run if adopted by other employers.

However, meeting financial targets also qualifies workers for bonuses, and officials of a rival nurses' union said they found that part of the contract troubling. "You can't put health care professionals in the position of being mercenaries," said Roseanne De Moro, director of the California Nurses Assn., which represents Kaiser registered nurses in Northern California.

"It goes to the heart of why CNA did not join and will never join the partnership," De Moro said. "They can't be on the side of the market and the public at the same time. It's an inherent conflict of interest."

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