Business & Tech

Kaiser Workers to Strike Thursday

Walkout will affect Roseville facilities, unions say.

More than 1,000 nurses and other healthcare workers at Sacramento-area Kaiser Permanente medical centers are expected to walk off the job Thursday as part of a statewide labor dispute between the healthcare chain and the National Union of Healthcare Workers.

The one-day strike will affect the and , where many Roseville residents receive their care.

The union, which represents nurses, mental health counselors and optical workers at Kaiser facilities throughout California, is protesting proposed cuts in retirement and health benefits and what they describe as understaffing throughout the Kaiser system.

Find out what's happening in Rosevillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

β€œMental health professionals have patients that are under severe distress, with severe depression and sometimes suicidal ideations, that are forced to wait five or six weeks for an appointment,” said NUHW spokesperson Leighton Woodhouse. β€œThey are not able to give care that they as clinicians feel is appropriate because Kaiser puts restraints on them in order to save money.”

Kaiser released a statement that did not address the union’s specific complaints but urged them to save them for the bargaining table. The two sides have been negotiating for about a year on new contracts for the union’s members in Northern and Southern California.

Find out what's happening in Rosevillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

β€œWe believe the bargaining table is the best place to resolve differences,” said the statement from Senior Vice President of Human Resources Gay Westfall.

The NUHW represents only about 30 health workers in the Sacramento area, according to Woodhouse, but they will be joined by a sympathy strike of the much larger California Nurses Association, which claims over 5,000 registered nurses members in the region. Statewide, about 23,000 Kaiser workers will strike Thursday, the unions say.

Westfall said Kaiser β€œis well prepared to continue providing high quality health care and service” during the strike.

Cathy Kennedy, a registered nurse and CNA member at the Kaiser Roseville Medical Center, said many non-urgent appointments originally scheduled for Thursday had been canceled. But she urged Sacramento-area Kaiser patients who need emergency care during the strike to go to the same hospital they would normally use.

β€œDon’t stay away,” she said. β€œIf there’s a real emergency, we’ve got competent, skilled nurses ready to go inside.”

Kennedy said a β€œpatient care task force” made up of nurses from various specialties, would be on call at each hospital to step in if needed in an emergency.

In a letter sent out to Kaiser Permanente patients Wednesday morning, officials said the strike would last from 7 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 22 to 7 a.m. Friday, Sept. 23. Here's some of what officials said in the letter:

As always, our first priority is the safety and care of our members and patients. We’ve taken steps to make sure you will continue to receive high-quality care from a team of experienced doctors and other clinicians. Kaiser Permanente medical centers and medical offices will remain open during the work stoppage, including our hospitals, Emergency Departments, Urgent Care Departments, primary and specialty care departments, pharmacies, and laboratories.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Roseville