Northern California
Angela Young
Meet Angela Young, one of the Humans of Partnership.
I’ve worked for Kaiser Permanente for 35 years. I was here before the partnership, when we experienced the turbulent times of a 7½-week strike. The creation of the Labor Management Partnership has helped me navigate ways to do better by our patients and improve working relationships. As a steward for SEIU-UHW, I have represented my union and facility during national bargaining five times. As the facility labor co-lead for Roseville Medical Center, I use what I learn in bargaining and apply it to working in partnership every day. I am grateful for the experiences of meeting and learning from my brothers and sisters from all over the country—and from both sides of the table.
Rosalyn Evans
'No Big Me, little you'
Mutual respect sustains these National Claims UBT co-leads over the long haul.
Denice Washington
Meet Denice Washington, one of the Humans of Partnership.
At the beginning, some people laughed at this partnership. It was a wild idea—the concept of having a venue where the workers would have a voice was unique. How are we going to make that happen? I look at it as a marriage. We liked each other. We started dating. We courted a bit. Then we got engaged, and now we’re married. We went through some not-easy times. Labor had to look at our relationship with management. Management had to look at its relationship with labor. You have to work at a marriage every day. A lot of the success of a marriage has to do with communication and how you engage with your partner. There are hard conversations that have to happen, and you’ve got to have the ability to trust your partner and be open and receptive to ideas. I have non-Kaiser Permanente clients in the adversarial world, so I juggle. But when I go from adversarial to partnership, it’s great. I’m high on communication and engagement—and working together, in partnership.
Valerie Felix and Kristie Sequeira
Meet Valerie Felix and Kristie Sequeira, two Humans of Partnership from Fresno, California.
We treat each patient as an individual, providing them with the care that we want for ourselves and our family. Our radiology team continues to work on cutting wait times, and greeting patients warmly. We will even stand in line for patients who are not able to stand long for registration.
—Valerie Felix, service unit manager and UBT management co-lead , radiology (on left)
I take pride in going above and beyond for every Kaiser member that comes into Radiology. I try to make a difference so that patients and staff have an exceptional experience in our department. Our team works together to create the best ideas such as cutting down wait times and making scheduling easier by confirming patients have had e-consultations, orders are on file, no double bookings, and a nightly review of the schedule.
—Kristie Sequeira, cashier receptionist and UBT labor co-lead, SEIU UHW, radiology (on right)
Savings From Around the Regions
Find out how innovations such as eSignatures are helping teams save money while boosting quality and service in every KP region.
Let's Try Something Different
See how a free to speak culture at the Sacramento pharmacies helped unit-based team members shorten wait times.
See how a free to speak culture at the Sacramento pharmacies helped unit-based team members reduce wait times.
Produced by Kellie Applen.
Shot and edited by CrushPix Video Production Company.
Bianca Ruff
Meet Bianca Ruff, one of the Humans of Partnership.
My first day at Kaiser Permanente was my 22nd birthday. One of the Emergency Department doctors I worked with told me, ‘As long as you do right by the patient, you can’t do wrong by the company.’ Over the years, I’ve had a lot of opportunity to reflect on what ‘doing right’ means to me. I think it all comes down to choices. When I was 16, my parents died, and I watched how differently my older brothers and I handled their deaths. I’ve come to realize, even if we weren’t doing it consciously, we were making choices with our grief. So now I try to make my choices conscious ones. Working in the Emergency Department, I frequently see people on the worst days of their lives. They’re dealing with pain, fear and grief. I can relate to that, so the first choice I make every day is my attitude. I choose to have a positive outlook. I choose to take that extra step. To be patient and empathize with people. That’s how I put my heart into my work, with my choices.
Joanna Harris
Meet Joanna Harris, one of the Humans of Partnership. “As the youngest of four kids and the only girl, I learned that I had to decide if I was going to be a leader or a follower," she says.
As the youngest of four kids and the only girl, I learned that I had to decide if I was going to be a leader or a follower. To be a leader, I would need to be confident, take risks, possess communication skills, have knowledge and build relationships. I enjoyed riding dirt bikes and was a tomboy. I started my own BMX dirt bike club with the kids in my neighborhood. We would work together on new stunts and compete against other kids. I learned that teamwork makes the dream work and there is no ‘I’ in team.