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1,500+ USC healthcare workers overwhelmingly authorize five-day strike

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | May 27, 2021 Business Affairs
LOS ANGELES — More than 1,500 healthcare workers at Keck Hospital of USC, USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center and several university clinics and call centers have authorized a 5-day strike. After a week of voting, more than two-thirds of workers cast ballots and 96 percent of the ballots cast supported the strike authorization.

No strike date has been set, and negotiations are scheduled to resume Thursday.

The workers, who include nursing assistants, respiratory therapists, housekeepers, medical technicians and licensed vocational nurses represented by the National Union of Healthcare Workers, are fighting to improve wages, protect their health and retirement benefits and preserve their right to inform the public about conditions inside their hospitals.

"USC has mistreated its caregivers during the pandemic," said Patricia Barahona, a patient care technician at Keck Hospital of USC. "We've put our lives on the line for our patients; meanwhile the university has cut our retirement benefits, made it harder for us to take sick leave and refused to offer hazard pay to maintain staffing even during the worst days of the COVID-19 surge."

USC cancelled its annual 5 percent contribution to employee retirement accounts last year, and has so far rejected proposals from healthcare workers to reverse the takeaway.

At the bargaining table, USC is also:

Demanding a 9 percent increase in employee health care premiums.

Refusing to restore holiday pay for workers at the Norris cancer hospital.

Insisting on the right to subcontract workers.

Refusing to guarantee emergency housing and hazard pay in the event of a future pandemic.

Seeking to eliminate the right of workers to hold pickets or public protests even to inform the public about patient care concerns for the duration of the contract.

Caregivers protested outside Keck Hospital of USC last year against the university imposing rules that limited sick leave and imposed harsh penalties on workers who need more time to recover from illnesses or take care of their sick family members. That protest, which took place just one month before California's first shelter-in-place order, would have been forbidden under the university's current proposal.

"We can't provide the care our patients deserve, if we can't inform the public of problems we see in our hospitals," April Henriquez, a support coordinator at Keck Hospital of USC. "We don't want to strike, but we've been through too much to let USC cut our benefits, put our safety at risk or prevent us from speaking out and advocating for our patients."

The National Union of Healthcare Workers is a member-led movement representing more than 15,000 healthcare workers in California including more than 1,500 workers at Keck-USC hospitals, clinics and call centers.

Keck Medicine of USC includes two acute care hospitals: the 401-bed Keck Hospital of USC and the 60-bed USC Norris Cancer Hospital. It also owns the community hospital USC Verdugo Hills Hospital, and it includes more than 40 outpatient facilities.

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