Kaiser Permanente reaches tentative labor deal with 19k healthcare workers

Tens of thousands registered nurses and nurse practitioners at facilities owned by Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente reached a tentative labor deal with the healthcare giant March 16, according to a union news release.

The five-year proposed contract covers roughly 19,000 Kaiser Permanente RNs and nurse practitioners represented by the California Nurses Association. It includes 150 RN full- time equivalents to facilitate the move of Kaiser Permanente's existing GRASP patient classification system to Epic Acuity, and protects nurses' pensions and medical benefits for current and retired RNs and nurse practitioners, union officials said. It also includes an across-the-board 12 percent pay increase and 3 percent lump sum over the course of the contract, and the addition of 600 RN patient care coordinators.

Debora Catsavas, senior vice president of human resources at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, praised the proposed contract in a statement to Becker's Hospital Review.

"This agreement reflects our respect for Kaiser Permanente nurses and the excellent care they provide to our patients and members. It is aligned with our commitment to high quality care, affordability and being the best place to work in healthcare," the statement reads.

The union also praised the deal, saying it "protects existing standards while adding new patient care protections for Kaiser [Permanente] enrollees."

Healthcare workers will decide whether to ratify the proposed contract during membership meetings in March and April.

 

 

More articles on human capital and risk: 

Dignity Health closes 5-year labor deal with 15k California workers
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Pennsylvania nurses, technologists rally over staffing

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