
[File photo from previous action]
Nearly 2,400 mental health workers at Kaiser Permanente facilities are poised to strike beginning Monday amid contract talks and allegations of a “broken” system of care, while Kaiser Permanente officials say the union has been “slow walking” the negotiation process and planned to strike before labor talks even began.
“This is about equity for mental health care,” Jessica Rentz, a Kaiser Permanente therapist in Fontana, said in a statement released by the National Union of Healthcare Workers.
“We want to be with our patients, not on a picket line, but we can’t keep working in a system that treats mental health care like an assembly line job and denies us the time and resources to provide the care we know our patients need.”
Kaiser Permanente operates mental health treatment facilities in East Pasadena at the Pasadena Medical Offices, located at 3280 E Foothill Blvd. Its Southern California regional offices are located in Pasadena.
According to the union, the impacted workers include psychologists, social workers, psychiatric nurses, addiction medicine counselors, licensed clinical counselors and marriage and family therapists who “provide behavioral health care for Kaiser Permanente’s 4.8 million members in hospitals, clinics and medical offices homecare settings from San Diego to Bakersfield.”
The union’s contract with Kaiser Permanente expired Sept. 30.
The labor dispute comes one year after Kaiser Permanente reached a $50 million settlement with state regulators who said the health care giant’s mental health care system lacked adequate staffing that caused lapses in access to care for patients.
Kaiser Permanente officials said the organization has invested more than $1 billion since 2020 to expand its mental health capabilities in California, including the hiring of more therapists, the addition of resources and reductions in wait times for patients.
The union, however, says shortages are still persistent in Southern California, insisting Kaiser Permanente has about one therapist for every 3,000 Kaiser Permanente members, compared to one per 2,000 in Northern California. That ratio has limited the time available to therapists to respond to patient calls and emails, to develop treatment plans and prepare for appointments, leading to burn-out and causing newly hired therapists to leave their jobs, the union contends.
The union contends that one-fourth of the 1,508 mental health professionals hired by Kaiser Permanente’s Southern California region between January 2021 and September 2024 have already left their positions.
Kaiser Permanente officials said in a statement that the health care system is committed to continued negotiations “until this deal is done.” But it said the union has been focused on a strike since the beginning of talks, and has been “slow walking the negotiation process, including on the very issues the union has identified as key to reaching a contract.”
“It is apparent that their strategy all along has been to move to a strike,” according to a Kaiser Permanente statement. “They have been threatening to strike since before we began bargaining in July and have operated without a sense of urgency, declining to accept or counter the strong proposals Kaiser Permanente has put on the table. Most concerning, the union presented a proposal that could result in a full-time therapist spending 40% or more of their work week not seeing patients.”
According to Kaiser Permanente, it has presented the union with an offer that includes an 18% wage increase over four years, and also “enhances the comprehensive benefits our mental health professionals enjoy plus provides therapists more non-patient time for planning and preparation.”
Kaiser Permanente officials said that if a strike does occur, it has “comprehensive plans in place to minimize potential disruptions.”
“Kaiser Permanente will continue providing mental health care during a work stoppage,” according to Kaiser Permanente. “Our goal is to ensure timely care. Patients will have the opportunity to be seen by another professional in our extensive network if their regular provider is engaged in a work stoppage. If changes to appointments are necessary, we will notify individuals in advance.”
Union officials said they are seeking an agreement similar to that reached with Kaiser Permanente mental health workers in Northern California, who went on strike for 10 weeks two years ago.
The union is asking that Kaiser Permanente guarantee full-time therapists seven hours per week for patient care duties such as responding to patient calls and emails, developing treatment plans, communicating with social service agencies and preparing for appointments. Union officials said Kaiser Permanente is guaranteeing only four hours per week.
The union also wants raises to put the workers on par with non-mental health care employees, who the union claims earn 40% more. It is also calling for a restoration of pensions that the union says were eliminated for newly hired mental health professionals a decade ago, even though pensions are still in place for other workers ranging from doctors to janitors.