
Psychological well being employees protest outdoors the Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Heart on a strip of Sundown Blvd. They’re heading into their sixth month of placing over wages, advantages and time in between sufferers.
Katia Riddle / NPR
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Katia Riddle / NPR
In some ways, it was the standard protest scene. Dozens of placing psychological well being care employees chanted and marched Tuesday outdoors a Kaiser Permanente medical heart on a busy strip of Sundown Boulevard in Los Angeles. Passing vehicles honked in assist. Individuals vigorously waved do-it-yourself indicators.
However a couple of of the placing employees sat quietly beneath a tent, conserving their power and mixing electrolyte drinks – their solely deliberate sustenance for 5 days.
Pissed off and feeling unable to get their voices heard after practically six months of a strike to demand extra pay and advantages, these eight therapists had been taking their protest to the subsequent degree with a five-day starvation strike.
It is “an effort on our half to allow them to know that we’re severe,” mentioned Aida Valdivia, a licensed marriage and household therapist, who is among the starvation strikers.
Many employees on strike are already sacrificing, says Valdivia, by draining their financial savings accounts, going to meals banks, and borrowing cash from family and friends over these final months.
“We have needed to restrict our meals anyway,” mentioned Valdivia. “So principally you might be form of ravenous us, Kaiser.”
The employees started their strike in October, arguing that they deserve the identical pension that different Kaiser Permanente employees obtain, and pay equal to their colleagues in the identical therapeutic positions in different components of the state.
Additionally they argue that different well being care employees at Kaiser with comparable ranges of coaching, reminiscent of occupational therapists and radiation techs make as much as 40% greater than these in psychological well being.
Many say they do not have time to eat or go to the lavatory in between purchasers. Their calls for embrace extra time in between sufferers for issues like scheduling and paperwork.
Some employees have returned to their jobs, however lots of stay on strike with out pay. Organizers consider it’s the longest strike of psychological well being employees in U.S. historical past.
Kaiser Permanente – a corporation that capabilities as an insurer and because the largest supplier of well being care in California – has paid hundreds of thousands of {dollars} in fines in recent times to the state for its behavioral well being system’s failure to supply ample care. Many fines had been associated to lengthy wait instances, which psychological well being professionals maintain up as one other indicator of the overworked and understaffed workforce.
Kaiser Permanente representatives acknowledge that some advantages and pay usually are not equal with others, however argue that they nonetheless pay their employees competitively.
The psychological well being employees do obtain retirement advantages, however argue that the profit just isn’t the identical because the beneficiant pension that their colleagues in different departments – together with those who work in administration or service positions – earn. When requested if this was true, Kaiser representatives responded that they didn’t know.
In a written electronic mail assertion, Kaiser Permanente spokesperson Terry Kanakri mentioned the union was “demanding significantly increased pay to look after fewer sufferers.” He and different representatives argue that Southern California has completely different financial dynamics from different components of the state, and keep it’s the firm’s “accountability to steadiness offering a beneficiant contract for our workers with preserving high-quality care accessible and inexpensive for our members.”

Eight employees camped out in a church fellowship corridor for per week collectively whereas they had been on a five-day starvation strike. They rented one lodge room and took turns utilizing the bathe.
Katia Riddle / NPR
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Katia Riddle / NPR
Nonetheless, the starvation strike is making Kaiser Permanente administration take discover. “Having our workers go on a starvation strike may be very disturbing to us,” says Patty Clawson, senior vp of the continuum of operations and scientific providers for the corporate within the Southern California area.
Clawson says administration is raring to get again to the bargaining desk: “We’re dedicated to discovering the widespread floor for all of us.”
‘Is it regular to be getting chills?’
Sitting beneath the tent with different starvation strikers, Adriana Webb checked in with a nurse who got here by to watch their progress. “I felt like I used to be getting slightly little bit of chills,” mentioned Webb, who was on her second day of the starvation strike. “I Googled it and it mentioned it could possibly be as a result of I am in ketosis from not consuming.”
“It is slightly early for that,” replied David Verdiner, a nurse who works within the gastrointestinal division and was giving up his lunch hour to supply this medical counsel. “It could possibly be your blood sugar is slightly bit low.”
Verdiner is considered one of quite a lot of volunteers from different unions who’re doing medical oversight for these strikers. “The larger factor is that you simply really feel wonderful as we speak,” he reassured her. “Your physique’s going by withdrawals, proper? You are used to having three meals a day.”
Supporting the strikers close by on the picket line, Sal Roseli held an indication that learn “Identical firm, similar work. Why not similar wages, pension, advantages?”
Previously president of the Nationwide Union of Healthcare Employees, Roseli says Kaiser Permanete has a possibility to be a pacesetter on the problem of psychological well being parity. He imagines this starvation strike may assist lead the U.S. to a time when “the time period psychological well being care does not exist. It is merely well being care.”
Lack of psychological well being parity – equality in pay and funding between psychological well being care and bodily well being care – is a nationwide difficulty. One report confirmed roughly two-thirds of People with a recognized psychological well being situation had been unable to entry remedy, although they’d medical insurance.
California has handed parity legal guidelines to place psychological well being on the identical footing as bodily well being. Roseli says it is time for the state’s medical establishments to indicate their dedication.
California’s historical past of starvation strike
Whereas starvation strikes usually are not widespread as an organizing software, some hint their historical past again to Cesar Chavez’s historic farm employee strikes. “ No less than in my studying of it, a really California factor,” says Erik Loomis, a labor historian at The College of Rhode Island. “It’s extremely a lot linked to the Chavez expertise.”
Loomis cautions that when strikes persist, it may be a problem for employees to prevail. “When you could have a strike that lasts a very long time, it turns into very troublesome to win that strike as a result of normally which means the employer has the higher hand,” he says.
Doing one thing excessive like a starvation strike, says Loomis, could possibly be a curveball. “ Given the objectives of that strike, it could be fairly efficient,” says Loomis, however he cautions that within the competitors for eyeballs and ears in America, “getting consideration has develop into tougher.”
On Friday, the union introduced they’d scheduled new bargaining dates subsequent week with Kaiser Permanente. It was the primary assembly in a month, since earlier negotiations deteriorated.
Tom Morello, longtime member of rock band Rage In opposition to the Machine, stopped by to cheer on the strikers on Tuesday with a fast live performance. “I am a union man,” he informed the cheering crowd. “While you say union, I say energy!”

Tom Morello of the band Rage In opposition to the Machine informed the placing employees that he’d grown up with a single mother who was a highschool instructor, and in a union. “ We by no means had some huge cash, however we had sufficient cash for meals on the desk. Shirts on our again and amplifiers in our basement.” None of that might have been potential, he mentioned, with out the labor motion.
Katia Riddle / NPR
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Katia Riddle / NPR
After a couple of songs on the sidewalk, Morello left the strikers with this: “It is my perception that the way forward for the working class on this nation won’t be determined by Congress. It won’t be determined within the courts,” says Morello.
“It’s going to be determined by the solidarity of individuals identical to you on days identical to this.”