Northwest Administrators - Contract Ratified!

We’re excited to announce that members at Northwest Administrators overwhelmingly voted “YES” to ratify both the Administrative and Computer Operators contracts! The new contracts include:

  • Supplemental Wage Payment (Bonus) equivalent to 50 hours of pay,

  • 3.00% wage increase retroactively paid back to September 1, 2021,

  • Significantly improved layoff and recall language ensuring that, when facing a layoff, employees shall be released by inverse seniority and then returned to work before hiring new employees.

  • Strong protection against potential increases to the cost of healthcare,

  • And more!

Please reach out to Union Rep Rhonda Fisher-Ivie @ (206) 436-6584 if you have any questions about the new contracts.

Kaiser Permanente Pro Tech Optical and Pharmacy Update October 25 - Informational Picketing and Solidarity—We are One KPWA!

After several months of bargaining with Kaiser Permanente, union members are still waiting for management to recognize the extreme working conditions and sub-optimal staffing they are continuing to experience during an ongoing international pandemic. Kaiser seems unwilling to acknowledge that workers have stepped up and provided the best care without missing a beat. 

Furthermore, management continues to insist that KPWA employees are already receiving above average wages. During recent local bargaining, management was condescending and short tempered with our bargaining team, who have been working diligently to provide contract language that is respectful of workers and their families. But management is looking for takeaways. Join us to show Kaiser what Solidarity looks like—all workers, patients, and community standing together for Staffing and Retention.  

INFORMATIONAL PICKETING (Pro-Tech Optical ONLY)
Wednesday, November 3
11:30AM – 1:30PM

Bellevue Medical Center

  • 11511 NE 10th St, Bellevue, WA 98004

Central Campus (Capitol Hill)

  • 201 16th Ave E, Seattle, WA 98112

Tacoma Medical Center

  • 209 M.L.K. Jr. Way, Tacoma, WA 98405

Silverdale Medical Center (Leafleting only)

  • 10452 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale, WA 98383

Wear Solidarity Stickers if you work in another Clinic, work in Pharmacy, or another Union! 

  • Pharmacy Members cannot participate in picketing due to local contract expiring 7/31/22.

  • Spokane Pharmacy Techs will be wearing Solidarity Stickers.

Pro-Tech Optical members may join informational picketing on lunch, break, or before/after work. Everyone’s friends and family can attend−all are welcome! Please help share widely. 

RSVP to the Info Picket!

Hold the Date! UFCW 21 Kaiser Telephone Town Hall on Monday, November 1. You will receive a phone call at 7:30PM—just pick up to join!

Kaiser UFCW21 members will discuss our rights to join informational picketing and wear solidarity stickers, share bargaining updates, and answer questions. You may update your contact information online.

Update Your Info

National Bargaining Update 

Last week, three of the Alliance’s largest unions−UNAC/UHCP, United Steelworkers Local 7600, and OFNHP−AFT Local 5017 −announced that over 95% of each union’s members voted to authorize a strike. This week, two more locals announced their members also voted overwhelmingly to authorize strikes−Unite Here! Local 5 in Hawaii, and UFCW Locals in SCAL. Collectively, these five unions represent 36,000 Alliance members eligible to strike now with more locals voting soon. We are united to win for our patients, our communities, and each other! #BestJobsBestCare #safestaffingsaveslives

Read the Latest National Bargaining Update

Learn about your rights to Informational Picket, ask questions, and help coworkers organize a successful action. Join us for the next Contract Action Team meeting!

Wednesday, October 27 • 6:00 PM

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.


For questions or for more information, please contact your Union Steward or Union Representative Rhonda Fisher-Ivie at 206-436-6584. 



Macy's - Tentative Agreement Reached with Macy’s!

The bargaining committee is happy to announce that we have reached a fully recommended tentative agreement for a new union contract! In the coming days we will be announcing the dates, times, and places for the vote meetings. Full details of the tentative agreement will be available at the vote meetings.

This fully recommended offer that includes wage increases, new safety and pandemic language, and NO TAKE AWAYS!

Conifer - Bargaining Begins

Your Bargaining Team met with Management for the first time on Friday, October 15, kicking off negotiations for our next contact.

At this session we sent Management our initial proposal, which primarily focused on non-economic workplace issues. Our proposal addressed issues such as discipline, promotions, telecommuting, work schedules, union activity, and much more. We prefer to resolve the easier proposals before getting into economics as wages generally dominate the table once proposed.

The Employer then responded in the afternoon by outright rejecting most of our proposals, which is generally expected in an initial Employer response. However, we have come to an agreement that work schedules will be posted 14 days before the start of the schedule, up from our current 7-day requirement. We are also pleased that the Employer hasn’t proposed any takeaways yet, but we’re cautiously optimistic because there is still time for that to change.

In the meantime, we’ve been working on a comprehensive market analysis as we prepare to make our wage proposal. Our wage proposal will be based on regional wages, however, we must also take into consideration the historic increases in daily costs we’ve been experiencing recently. Costs of everyday necessities such as gas, groceries and housing have chipped away at everyone’s paychecks and our wages need to reflect these changes. We hope to make this proposal before the end of the month.

Your Bargaining Team is scheduled to meet with Management today, October 22, then again on October 27. We are looking to schedule additional dates in November. Our contract is scheduled to expire after this month, but we will be working with the Employer to get an extension agreement in place so our contract remains as we continue negotiations.

“It’s been a great start but still a long way to go until we reach the finish line.”

-Bargaining Team: Shirley Messner, Rosandra Fedorko, Molly Werder

RELEASE: WA Health Care Workers Call On Hospitals To Mitigate the Staffing Crisis

FOR RELEASE: Oct. 19, 2021

WA Health Care Workers Call On Hospitals To Mitigate the Staffing Crisis

Short-sighted and costly stopgap measures are only a bandaid; Hospitals have the tools and resources to alleviate burnout nightmare

SEATTLE -- With increasing volume, hospital administrators across Washington have joined health care workers and the unions that represent them in calling attention to the unprecedented staffing crisis. But today, nurses and other frontline workers are calling on hospitals to use the tools and resources they have available to finally begin mitigating this crisis for workers and patients.

“We’ve heard near-unanimous agreement around the problem,” said Julia Barcott, a critical care nurse in Toppenish and WSNA union leader. “That’s great. But only one voice in this conversation has the ability to immediately begin fixing this problem, and that’s the hospitals. It’s past time we saw meaningful action and policy changes from them, for the sake of our frontline workers and for patients and families across the state.”

There are a number of policies hospital administrations could immediately enact that would help begin to alleviate some of the burnout on nurses and improve conditions for workers and patients, including:

Ending mandatory overtime policies and ensuring workers can safely take rest breaks to return to compliance with already-existing state law

  • Retention bonuses for frontline workers who have stayed on the job, which would ostensibly help offset hospitals’ apparent need for massive signing bonuses for new staff

  • Incentive pay for burned-out workers who take on additional shifts

  • Incentive pay and appropriate orientation for workers who take on extra work or shifts in a department they don’t work in

  • Posting enough positions in all job categories to achieve safe staffing levels

  • Actively working to fill all open positions

“We’re asking for just compensation and recognition for the work we’ve all been doing and the fact we’ve stayed on the job,” said Tracy Mullen, a nurse in the emergency department at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle and member of SEIU Healthcare 1199NW. “Imagine spending the entirety of this pandemic at the bedside, and the person next to you is a traveling nurse making upwards of three- to four-times as much while the hospital apparently can’t find resources for retention bonuses or incentive pay.”

To understand the magnitude of the current staffing crisis, it’s critical to understand that a staffing shortage in Washington hospitals persisted long before the pandemic. For years, health care workers and their unions have warned our state’s hospitals about short-staffing and the potentially dire consequences. Had hospitals taken action to address adequate staffing years ago, we wouldn’t be facing such an extreme shortage now while we battle this pandemic. COVID exacerbated this already strained infrastructure, and hospitals’ response to the pandemic — including slowly filling open positions, falling back on mandatory overtime, and spending resources on signing bonuses and traveling positions rather than existing staff retention — has only worsened this preexisting shortage and led to massive burnout among workers.

“Large signing bonuses, filling positions with traveling staff, asking the federal government for emergency staff capacity — all of these are stopgap measures,” said Faye Guenther, president of UFCW 21. “You won’t reduce the need for these expensive, short-term fixes until you address the underlying problems causing burned-out health care workers to leave the bedside. In the long run the only way we’re going to see this crisis start to get better for workers and patients is for hospitals to step up and apply even a portion of that energy and those resources towards making the day-to-day working conditions of their nurses and other staff manageable.”

###

About SEIU Healthcare 1199NW

SEIU Healthcare 1199NW is a union of nurses and healthcare workers with over 30,000 caregivers throughout hospitals, clinics, mental health, skilled home health and hospice programs in Washington state and Montana. SEIU Healthcare 1199NW’s mission is to advocate for quality care and good jobs for all.

About WSNA 

WSNA is the leading voice and advocate for nurses in Washington state, providing representation, education and resources that allow nurses to reach their full professional potential and focus on caring for patients. WSNA represents more than 19,000 registered nurses for collective bargaining who provide care in hospitals, clinics, schools and community and public health settings across the state. 

About UFCW 21 

UFCW 21 is working to build a powerful union that fights for economic, political and social justice in our workplaces and our communities. We represent over 45,000 workers in retail, grocery stores, health care, and other industries in Washington state.

Capital Medical Center Technical Service - BARGAINING UPDATE

Your bargaining team kicked off negotiations with management on September 17 and then continued on September 27 and October 13.

At this early stage in negotiations our proposals have primarily focused on non-economic items, with the hope that we can resolve the less-contentious issues before wages dominate the conversation. Our initial proposals addressed issues such as floating, discipline, Extended Illness Bank (EIB)/Paid Time Off (PTO) improvements, and more. 

In the meantime, your bargaining team has been working on a comprehensive market analysis of wages in the region, including other MultiCare facilities such as Tacoma General, as we prepare to make our initial wage proposal in the coming weeks. 

However, management surprised the team on October 13 by making a proposal to significantly change our healthcare premiums. Recognizing that employees at Capitol Medical Center are paying significantly more for healthcare than other MultiCare units, management proposed to align our premium costs to what employees are paying at other facilities. 

The proposed changes to premium rates would include significant savings, with many saving hundreds of dollars every month. In fact, the employee only option on the My Connected Care plan would have no premium, costing the employee absolutely nothing in premium costs! The only plan that would experience a slight increase in costs would be the High Deductible Plan (HDHP), and that is because a new Health Savings Account (HSA) benefit would be added to the plan with the employer contributing annually to the account. 

After extensively reviewing the proposal, your bargaining team has agreed to the changes, which will go into effect starting January 2022. All other details of your benefits plans will remain unchanged (deductibles, co-pays, out of pocket maximums, etc.). The agreed upon changes will be reflected during open enrollment next month, with the option to change your plan by November 30 for plan year 2022.

Changes in healthcare premiums will also apply to the Nurses’ contract, however, since they are not in open contract negotiations they will soon conduct a special membership vote to approve the changes. The technical/service unit will vote when we’ve reached a tentative agreement on the entire contract. 

Your bargaining team will meet with management again on October 20, 25 and November 1, 10, 17. We have signed an extension agreement to ensure all benefits and protections of our contract remain in place as we continue negotiations for a successor agreement. 

“We’re optimistic as MultiCare has taken a more collaborative approach to negotiations compared to our past employers.”

Our Bargaining Team: Adam Swigart, Julie Hinchcliff, Maureen Ciglia

Jefferson Healthcare RN - Management’s Priorities: Recruitment (& Retention?)

Last week the Union RN Bargaining Team made a full economic proposal which included sustainable across the board wage increases and significant improvements to premiums. The team also proposed strong contract language that would better define floating and cross-training. Other contract language would promote improved scheduling.

This week Management prefaced their proposal with a statement about the importance of “recruitment and retention.”

Management presented their economic “package” this week that seemed to emphasize recruitment with seemingly little regard to retention. Management’s proposal would increase wages for some pay rates significantly and others would receive less than a 2% increase in the first year. The lowest increases would include those nurses currently at or near the top of the pay scale. This proposal from Management did little to improve premiums and in no way addressed the huge staffing issues that have significantly impacted all nurses.

Management has also made a proposal to eliminate contract language for Medical Leave, which currently allows for up to six months of leave protecting the employee’s specific position (shift, FTE.) They are proposing to replace this leave with language deferring to state/federal leave laws (i.e. FMLA.) Most state and federal leave does not exceed 12 weeks. This is a huge reduction! Where is the respect Jefferson?

Please share this information with coworkers! Our next bargaining session is scheduled for Tuesday, October 19!

Our Jefferson Healthcare RN Bargaining Team: Ben Schadler, RN ICU; Melanee Knudson, RN FBC; Jeannette Hundley, RN Surgical Services; Robin Bridge, RN ED; Ryan DeGouveia, UFCW 21; Cathy Macphail, UFCW 21

Macy's - Come and Join the Info Picket!

2021 1013 - Macys Update.png

Management continues to not listen to the Bargaining Committee when it comes to:

  • Living wages, the most that they are offering just a $0.30/hr increase, and they still insist on eliminating our wage scale

  • Keeping our attendance credits, management refuses to withdraw its arbitrary and unfair “Reliability” attendance system

  • Continuing to keep MLK Day as a full PTO, Macy’s doesn’t want to continue with its past practice, calling it an additional expense

  • The loss of holiday, personal day and vacation time due to a pandemic

It is time for Macy’s to hear from their workers that their behavior at the table is not acceptable, and that we will accept nothing less than a fair contract.

Join us for informational picketing at the three mall stores!

Friday, October 29

Southcenter @ 1-4pm
Alderwood @ 1-4pm
Bellingham @ 1-3pm

RSVP online
Go to: bit.ly/Macys1029

Forks Community Hospital Service & Technical Update

2021 1014 Forks Community Hospital Service and Tech.jpg

Forks Community Hospital Service & Technical

New Incentive Shift Pay for Forks Tech & Service Workers

After pressure from members, Management has agreed to implement a new shift incentive for many classes of workers covered under the Forks Tech/Service contract! The incentive is for shifts picked up beyond an employee’s FTE. Per diem employees are also eligible for the incentive after working 5 scheduled shifts.

Incentives for designated shifts are as follows:

For LPN and Imaging

8 hour shift: $200

10 hour shift: $250

12 hour shift: $300

For Surgical Tech, NAC, MA, EVS, Dietary, Lab Assistant,

Admitting Clerk, and Clinic Receptionist

8 hour shift: $100

10 hour shift: $125

12 hour shift: $150

Auburn Medical Center RN - Tentative Agreement Reached—Vote Scheduled

2021 1013 - Auburn Medical Center Vote Notice2.jpg

Your Bargaining Team has reached a tentative agreement with management on a new three-year collective bargaining agreement for Registered Nurses at Auburn Medical Center. We are very excited to tell you that this agreement includes the following: 

  • UNPRECEDENTED WAGE INCREASES that would give Auburn Medical Center one of the highest RN wage scales in King County.

  • INCLUDES FULL RETRO PAY BACK TO AUGUST 15, 2021!

  • SOME OF THE HIGHEST PREMIUMS IN THE REGION! Increases to shift differential, standby pay, weekend premium, charge nurse pay, preceptor pay, and float pay.

  • Maintained annual bonuses for members at the top of the wage scale. 

  • New language that forbids the employer from forcing nurses to float to other hospitals,

  • Improved charge nurse language allowing nurses to object to the assignment,

  • No health care premium increases next year with caps in subsequent years,

  • Permanently added the Spot Bonus Incentive plan into our contract,

  • And so much more!

The full details of the offer will be made available during our online vote meeting on October 25.

Auburn Medical Center (RN) Online Meeting

Monday, October 25

6:00PM

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.

It’s extremely important that members attend the zoom meeting to get a full understanding of the employer’s offer and have your questions answered. However, voting will not take place at this meeting.

We will be voting online via “SimplyVoting” on Tuesday, October 26 from 6:00AM to 8:00PM. You will be receiving an email from UFCW 21 via “SimplyVoting” with your unique login information. 

In order to vote, everyone needs to make sure their personal email is up to date in our records. If you did not receive this announcement via email, please visit ufcw21.org/update-your-information and update your information. If you do not receive an email to vote on Tuesday October 26, then please reach out to Union Representative Kent Tse at ktse@ufcw21.org no later than 5PM on the day of the vote to provide an updated email address. 

Trios Health Bargaining Update - Federal Mediator has been Contacted!

2021 1013 - Trios Health Update.png

The Union continues to push for fair wages. We gave a counter compensation proposal to the employer and did not receive a favorable response.

“The Federal Mediator will be joining the bargaining table on October 22, 2021 and through the remainder of the bargaining process in hopes of bringing us closer to “Market Competitive Positions” within our community.”

- Casey Nitta, RN, Bargaining Team Member

UNITED WE WIN, DIVIDED WE BEG

Please contact your bargaining team or Union Rep Austen Louden @ 509-340-7372 with any questions or concerns.

Northwest Administrators - Tentative Agreement Reached—Vote Scheduled

2021 1011 - Northwest Admin Vote Notice2.jpg

Your Bargaining Team has reached a tentative agreement with Management on new collective bargaining agreements for both units at Northwest Administrators. Your Bargaining Team unanimously recommends a “YES” vote!

This agreement includes:

  • Supplemental Wage Payment (Bonus) equivalent to 50 hours of pay after ratification,

  • Higher wage increases compared to our last vote retroactively paid back to September 1, 2021,

  • Significantly improved layoff and recall language ensuring that, when facing a layoff, employees shall be released by inverse seniority and then returned to work before hiring new employees. 

  • Strong protection against potential increases to the cost of healthcare,

  • And more

The full details of the offer will be made available during our online vote meeting on Thursday October 21.

Northwest Administrators Online Meeting

Thursday October 21 

6:00PM

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be also emailed out.

It’s extremely important that members attend the zoom meeting to get a full understanding of the employer’s offer and have your questions answered. However, voting will not take place at this meeting.

We will be voting online via “SimplyVoting” on Friday, October 22 from 6:00AM to 8:00PM. You will be receiving an email from UFCW 21 via “SimplyVoting” with your unique login information. 

If you do not receive an email to vote on Friday October 22, then please reach out to Union Representative Rhonda Fisher-Ivie at (206) 436-6584 no later than 5PM on the day of the vote to provide an updated email address. 

Providence RadiantCare, we demand bargaining dates

2021 1012 - RadiantCare Bargaining Update.png

It has been six months since we unionized, and we have not received bargaining dates from Providence! Typically, we head to the bargaining table about 3 - 6 months after unionizing and bargain for about 10 - 12 months for a first contract. Providence Centralia (Techs and Service units) and Providence St. Peter’s (Tech unit) bargained for about fifteen months in order to reach a first contract agreement.

We have formed a Bargaining Committee comprised of Kelly Covington (RN), Winter Everson (Radiation Therapist), Branden Raftery (Dosimetrist), and Paul Lofing (Radiation Therapist). The job of the Bargaining Committee is to be the voice of the entire bargaining unit at the negotiation table and represent the interests of all workers within the unit. The committee has presented each departments’ contract wish list and we have discussed contract priorities for the entire bargaining unit.

Part of preparing for negotiations involves requesting information from Providence. In August, we requested that Providence provide policies, procedures, an employee roster, all employee benefit plans, and other information pertinent to negotiations, but we have not received anything from them. This information is over a month late! If Providence continues to delay fulfilling the information request, we will be taking legal action.

This information is needed to create a proper first proposal. Currently we have created an initial non-economic proposal based on the bargaining committee’s knowledge and the feedback they have heard from their departments.

We will continue requesting bargaining dates from Providence and will be seeking legal action on this matter as well if they delay further!

If you have comments, workplace issues, or are facing disciplinary action, please contact your Union Rep Erin McCoy (206) 436-6598 (landline).

Providence Centralia Techs UNANIMOUSLY RATIFIY FIRST CONTRACT!

2021 1008 - Prov Centralia Tech Bargaining Update.png

On October 7, the Providence Centralia Techs unanimously approved their first contract! About fifteen months after organizing, we were able to obtain a great first contract with competitive wage increases and job protections.

Our next step is for both parties to sign the contract, which usually takes one to two months. Then we will distribute paper copies of the contract and post it on our website at: ufcw21.org.

Your new wage increases will go into effect the first full pay period following October 7.

If you have any workplace or disciplinary issues, please reach out to your Union Rep Erin McCoy, 206-436-6598 (landline), or the Membership Resource Center, 206-436-6570.

You can find more information about your Union rights, Shop Steward training, free college, Union discounts, and how to sign a Union membership application at: ufcw21.org/new-members.

Welcome to UFCW 21, PCH Techs, and congratulations on winning your first contract!

Bargaining Team: Jennifer Frunz, Kathy Spencer, Jennifer Mullins

Central Washington Hospital Contract Ratified with Super Majority YES Vote!

2021 1007 - Central Washington Update.png

Thanks to the many members that turned out for the contract vote, asked questions, and made your voice heard.

There is power in numbers- we’ll need to stay active as union members over the next few years to keep making improvements to staffing at Central Washington Hospital. All wage increases and ratification bonus will be paid the first full pay period after ratification.

REMINDER- All members have a right to an Equity Review within 30 days of ratification. If you feel that your wage step is incorrect, please contact Human Resources and request a review.

Questions? Please reach out to your Bargaining Team with any concerns or contact your Union Rep Maureen Hatton, 509-340-7370.

COMPLETE YOUR UNION MEMBERSHIP ONLINE!
https://bit.ly/centralWAhospital

Auburn Medical Center RNs Bargaining Update

We’ve been negotiating with MultiCare for a few months and, while significant progress has been made, we remain apart on many items. 

The major problem we’re facing is that MultiCare is trying to copy and paste the agreements we’ve recently won at their Pierce County facilities, unwilling to agree to anything different. Auburn Medical Center is a unique facility with different issues, and most importantly, in a different labor market. 

Please sign our petition demanding that Management recognizes that Auburn Medical Center nurses deserve more than a copy and paste agreement! Demanding that Management offer an economic package that will attract and retain nurses in King County not only today, but for the entire duration of our contract. 

Survey Link: bit.ly/MC-Staffing21
  
You’re Invited! Please join us for our next Contract Action Team (CAT) meeting to hear the latest from your bargaining team.

MHS Auburn Medical Center CAT Meeting
Wednesday, October 6 @ 6:30 PM

Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for Zoom details

Bargaining Team: Cory Larsen, Kathleen Vukelich, Caroline Bellinger

CHI Virtual Health Services CONTRACT RATIFIED!

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We excited to announce that members at CHI Virtual Health Services voted to ratify their new contract on Friday October 1! This historic contract includes a new wage scale that is competitive with neighboring employers, including MultiCare, which will help attract and retain staff.

We’ve informed the Employer of this news and they’ve said the new wages should go into effect no later than two pay periods after ratification. If you have any questions about your contract, please contact Union Representative Kent Tse at (206) 436-6512.

Macy's refuses to increase wage

Macy’s Refuses to Increase Wages

On Thursday, September 30, our Bargaining Team met with Macy’s and ended the day frustrated with:

-No increase to their wage proposal,
-Their refusal to retain MLK Day as a PTO,
-Their continued insistence on taking away our attendance credits and pay scales,
-No progress on dealing with the problems that the pandemic store closures created for our vacation and holiday pay.

Macy’s was clear that they expected us to accept their take-aways and low wages, and that you all would vote yes on it.  It is clear to us is that Macy’s corporate “People Leaders” are out of touch with what their people are going through in the stores!  

While they are offer bonuses for working on the weekends, sticking around through the Holidays, and referring friends and family to apply at Macy’s, they refuse to pay us a basic living wage. They talk about “reliability” when it comes to our attendance but refuse to see how unreliable they are if we can’t make the rent. Instead of investing in their business through our work, they expect us to bear the burden on our lives that their low-ball proposals create.

Who makes Macy’s business work? We do!

“With all the nothing that Macy’s gave us on Thursday, we need to get them with a lot of something! Come to the CAT Meeting as we prepare for our info picket day!”

—Candice Hemphill


Join us for our second Contract Action Team (CAT) meeting! We will be preparing for informational picketing and other actions as we take our fight to the public and our customers.

Friday, October 8 @ 5 PM
https://zoom.us/join 
Contact your Bargaining Team or Union Rep for call-in details. Details will be emailed out.

telephone town hall call - introduction to the 2022 grocery negotiation

As a union grocery store member if UFCW 21 you get to have a voice about your wages, benefits, workplace safety, scheduling and more. We have a contract, a signed and legally binding document with your employer that governs most of this. And every three years we get to renegotiate that contract and have the opportunity to make improvements.

On Monday, October 4th we will be holding a live Telephone Town Hall to update everyone on the basics of this process that will be happening in 2022 but has already begun with many thousands of you filling out surveys to say what is most important to you.

Hope you can join us on Monday at 7 pm to find out more. Informed and active members in the workplace allow our union to negotiate for protecting our high quality, low cost health care, secure our retirement pension, and push for improved wages and workplace safety training, adequate staffing on the schedule and more.

The call is at 7 pm Monday 10/4

We will call you, all you need to do is answer to join the Town Hall call

if for some reason we miss you or call does not come through, you can call in at: 1-888-652-0386 and enter Meeting ID: 6333