Agreement/Trust - Color

Leading in Partnership for Mid-Level Leaders (classroom, virtual)

Submitted by Beverly White on Tue, 10/26/2021 - 15:08
Request Number
LSR-1983 (LMPSITE-1521)
Long Teaser

Get a basic understanding of how to be successful as you partner with other managers for the benefit of patients and members.

Communicator (reporters)
Beverly White
Editor (if known, reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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Tips and Tools

Use these tools to perfect your management partnering skills.

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Leading in Partnership for Mid-Level Leaders (classroom, virtual)
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Course description

This course has been designed to help mid-level leaders be successful as they partner and support effective partnering for the benefit of our patients and members.

Path to Performance

N/A

Duration

4 hours

Who should attend

Target attendees are mid-level leaders (in pairs). Each region’s management and local unions will define these leaders. Examples include:  KP mid-level management - director level and above at the medical center or hospital level, union mid-level leadership: stewards, chief stewards, contract specialists and labor liaisons; and UBT sponsors.

Course requirements

Labor Management Partnership Orientation (LMPO)

 

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Building Bridges

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 03/19/2021 - 16:53
Topics
Role
Hank
Request Number
ED-1854
Long Teaser

In the wake of nationwide protests against social injustice, teams look inward to achieve inclusive and equitable care.

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Sherry Crosby
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Take Action: Cultivating An Inclusive Workplace

Ready to help your team build a work environment that promotes belonging, empathy and allyship? Check out these equity and inclusion resources for frontline workers and managers:

  • Overcoming Your Own Unconscious Biases [KP intranet]. Discover how to understand and move past your biases. Log on to KP Learn to enroll in this web-based training (Skillsoft registration required).
  • ILEaD Workshop [KP intranet]. Learn how to practice and model inclusion to create lasting change. Find out more about this virtual course from National Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity.
  • Learning Paths [KP intranet]. Use these self-paced activities to get to know your colleagues better and create a more inclusive environment.
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Teams look inward to achieve inclusive and equitable care
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Spurred by nationwide protests against racism and social injustice, unit-based team members are launching cultural  competency projects aimed at delivering more equitable outcomes for their patients by looking closely at their own beliefs. 

Mid-Atlantic psychotherapist Erin Seifert knows that big change often involves many small steps. Delivering equitable care is no different, she says. 

“To give our patients the support and resources they need, we have to start with ourselves and our own biases and cultural competence,” says Seifert, labor co-lead for the North Baltimore Behavioral Health team and a member of UFCW Local 27. 

Team members, who are represented by unions belonging to the Alliance of Health Care Unions and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, began a monthly lunch-and-learn series about bias awareness in November. Activities include a pre- and post-evaluation and guided learning exercises that stimulate conversation about differences. 

“It’s very informative,” says Regina Foreman, a mental health assistant and member of OPEIU Local 2. “I’ve learned a lot, especially about implicit bias. The training is helping me be more aware of my own biases.” 

Such responses are encouraging, says Kristin Whiting-Davis, operations manager and the team’s management co-lead. 

“We need to be able to talk about our own privileges and our own biases,” Whiting-Davis says. “I hope it will help people practice having those discussions that, ultimately, will translate into the work we do with our members.

Welcoming all

Eager to protect their young patients from the effects of racism, members of the Southwood Pediatrics team in Jonesboro, Georgia, began by educating themselves. They held listening sessions for staff and read about the impact of intolerance on children.

Their efforts informed discussions on ways to create a more welcoming environment for patients, families and each other. Ideas include a coloring contest featuring uplifting images, adding diverse artwork to the department and creating resources for families coping with racial biases.

Next steps call for staff members to vote on the most promising proposals for further action.

“We want all cultures and races to feel welcome when they come to our pediatrics unit,” says Stephanie Henry, MD, physician co-lead of the Southwood Pediatrics team. “We all have biases. We need to be open and honest about how to confront them. Then we can build bridges to start having conversations about the patient’s health.”

With reporting by Brenda Rodriguez and Tracy Silveria.

 

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Tips for Managing in Partnership

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Thu, 03/22/2018 - 18:02
Region
Request Number
LSR-1658
Long Teaser

Managing in partnership is different from traditional management. Research shows that managers who engage their teams get better results.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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Download the Tip Sheet

Want a colorful tip sheet with these ideas to hand out and post on bulletin boards? Download one here!

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Tips for Managing in Partnership
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Managers who engage their teams get better results
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Managing in partnership is different from traditional management. You still have responsibility for managing employees’ performance, but when it comes to your department’s performance, the whole team plays a role in making the department a great place to work and to receive care. Frontline employees know where the problems are and have great ideas for solutions. Research shows that managers who engage their teams get better results, and team members are more enthusiastic about implementing the solution because they helped come up with it.

  1. Be knowledgeable about the National Agreement. Download the National Agreement or get from your local human resources representative.
  2. Get trained on the Labor Management Partnership. See your local learning and development website or our list of regional training contacts.
  3. Proactively develop relationships with your union partners. Get to know your shop steward, union representative and other local labor leaders. Check in with them on a regular basis to share information and get their ideas.
  4. Model partnership with your union partner. Treat each other with mutual respect. Attend LMP trainings together. Jointly develop meeting agendas and share meeting facilitation responsibilities. Share information, identify problems and develop possible solutions in collaboration.
  5. Be accessible to staff. Spend time visiting with people on the front lines. Roam the department on a regular basis. Eat in the lunch room. Implement an “open door” policy for staff members who come by and want to talk.
  6. Be open to the ideas of all employees. Encourage people to share ideas and have input on procedures or work flow. Create an environment in which people feel comfortable speaking up. And be open to trying new ways of doing things.
  7. Create a structure for dialogue and engagement. Make sure time is set aside for partnership meetings, huddles and training.
  8. Tell it like it is. Be open and honest in your communication and transparent with information. Share your department’s budget with team members to get their ideas on reducing costs.
  9. Recognize and value employees’ contributions. Go out of your way to acknowledge someone who comes up with or implements an idea that has made the department a better place to work and provide care.
  10. Develop employees to become department leaders. If union partners or other team members want to help the department succeed by polishing their problem-solving, meeting management or other skills, encourage and support them in their efforts.

 

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Consensus Decision Making (classroom)

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 01/10/2018 - 17:05
Keywords
Request Number
LSR-1983
Long Teaser

Get a basic understanding of consensus and how the consensus decision-making process works. 

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Tools for Making Decisions

Use these tools to perfect your skills in making decisions by consensus. 

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Consensus Decision Making (classroom, online)
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Course description

This course shows how to use consensus decision making in the partnership and unit-based team environment and explains the critical elements in a consensus decision.

Path to Performance

Level 1, 2

Duration

  • 90 minutes (classroom)
  • 30 minutes (online)

 

Who should attend

Anyone seeking a basic understanding of consensus and how the consensus decision-making process works. This includes labor, management and physician members of a unit-based team, Labor Management Partnership and unit-based team consultants, improvement advisors and Union Partnership Representatives.

Course requirements

Labor Management Partnership Orientation (LMPO)

 

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The Road Taken

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Fri, 09/01/2017 - 18:26
Region
Hank
Request Number
ED-1143 and ED-1135
Long Teaser

Key accomplishments in workforce planning and development, workplace safety, total health, joint marketing and growth and attendance (and a peek into the future). 

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Labor Management Partnership Milestones

1997: Labor Management Partnership established.

1999: Employment and Income Security Agreement gives coalition union-represented employees the opportunity to train for comparable positions in the event of layoffs.

2000: The first National Agreement is negotiated between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions; it establishes the Performance Sharing Program.

2001: KP and the coalition advocate for improved nurse-to-patient staffing ratios—the first such joint action in health care.

2005: The second National Agreement establishes unit-based teams.

2005-2009: Joint work to implement KP HealthConnect, setting the precedent for collaboration on future system rollouts, including ICD-10 and Claims Connect.

2008: A contract reopener includes a shared strategy to grow health plan and union membership. 

2010: Third National Agreement establishes performance goals and metrics for UBTs.

2012: Fourth National Agreement includes the Total Health Incentive Plan.

2014–2016: LMP is lauded by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service and others; KP and coalition leaders provide partnership advice to health systems across the United States and overseas. 

2015: Fifth National Agreement provides for joint assessment of future workforce needs, increases investment in workforce training, and arrives at a long-term solution that protects retiree medical benefits while reducing liabilities associated with those benefits.

2017: Union coalition grows to 116,000 union members; KP grows to 11.8 million health plan members.

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The Road Taken
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20 years of national program results
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Workforce Planning and Development

Key accomplishments

  • Program enrollments in Kaiser Permanente’s two education trusts grew from about 3,000 in 2007 to nearly 62,000 in 2016. 
  • Tuition reimbursement course applications nearly tripled, from less than 20,000 in 2008 to more than 57,000 in 2016, largely benefiting members of unions in the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions.
  • Critical skills training launched in June 2017 with a Digital Fluency pilot program for more than 2,000 employees.

Going forward

  • A top priority will be addressing the impact of economic, social and technological changes on care delivery and future KP staffing models. (Learn more at kpworkforce.org.)

Workplace Safety

Key accomplishments

  • Since program inception in 2001, KP’s injury rate has been reduced by 69 percent.
  • Injuries associated with patient handling and/or mobilization have decreased by 32 percent since 2011.
  • The program-wide workplace safety strategy was strengthened in 2016, based on the National Safety Council’s model.

Going forward

  • The strengthened safety strategy will be implemented, with the goal of closing the gap between KP’s injury rate and the Bureau of Labor Statistics adjusted injury rate for health care.

Total Health

Key accomplishments

  • More than 76,000 employees have taken the Total Health Assessment (THA) since 2014.
  • Ninety percent of eligible employees completed their recommended health screenings in 2014 and 2015, earning a $40 million payout under the Total Health Incentive Plan.
  • More than 3,000 UBT health and safety champions helped teams across the organization conduct 1,756 wellness projects in 2016—a 45 percent increase from 2015.

Going forward

  • New awareness campaigns, including one focusing on prediabetes education, will inform and empower employees to take charge of their own health and wellness.

Joint Marketing and Growth

Key accomplishments

  • Helped secure more than $108 million in revenue for Kaiser Permanente in 2016.
  • Supported the 20-year growth in the number of employees represented by a union in the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, from 57,000 to 116,000, and in Kaiser Foundation Health Plan membership, from 7.4 million members to 11.8 million. 
  • Since 2012, mobilized 51 union ambassadors who attended more than 300 community events and engaged more than 70,000 KP members and potential members—many of them unionized—increasing community knowledge and understanding of KP.

Going forward

  • Through the expansion of health plan membership, support job security and the continued growth of the coalition.

Attendance 

Key accomplishments

  • Enhanced time-off benefits to provide incentives for appropriate use of sick leave.
  • Developed the Time-Off Request Tracking System to provide greater flexibility and responsiveness in managing planned time off.
  • Achieved 21 percent fewer lost workdays in high-performing UBTs. 

Going forward 

  • Attendance data, systems and results will continue to be assessed and improved.

 

 

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Meet Your National Agreement: Settle Disputes With Issue Resolution

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Fri, 03/10/2017 - 15:46
Hank
Request Number
Hank50 Know your NA-pc.doc
Long Teaser

Working in partnership doesn't mean people always agree on issues. But the Labor Managment Partnership has mechanisms to address issues and solve disputes--in ways that preserve working relationships. See how the 2015 National Agreement streamlines the dispute resolution process.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
pics to come from 2015 bargaining or other meeting/discussion shots
http://assets.lmpartnership.org/pages/view.php?ref=34049&search=2015+bargaining&order_by=relevance&sort=DESC&offset=96&archive=0&k=&curpos=102&restypes=1%2C2%2C3%2C4
http://assets.lmpartnership.org/pages/view.php?ref=34195&search=2015+bargaining&order_by=relevance&sort=DESC&offset=288&archive=0&k=&curpos=335&restypes=1%2C2%2C3%2C4
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A new Issue Resolution process allows disputes to be resolved more quickly.
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TAKE ACTION: Learn more about problem solving in partnership

For questions about compliance with the 2015 National Agreement, speak with your union, manager or HR representative. 

Download the National Agreement to learn more about tools to solve problems in partnership.

  • For details on the issue resolution process, see Section 1.L. (pages 50–53) of the agreement.
  • See also Section 1.K.5., for disputes involving the creation of new jobs (pages 48–50).
  • See Section 2.C., for disputes involving wages and benefits (pages 70–72).

To initiate the Section 1.L.2 issue resolution process, use the form shown in Exhibit 1.L.2. (pages E30–E31) of the National Agreement or download it

Check out the Learning Portal to see the full range of LMP classes and workshops, including training in interest-based problem solving. 

 
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Issue Resolution: A Better Way to Settle Lingering Disputes
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Do people working in partnership always agree? People don’t.
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Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions resolve most differences involving our Labor Management Partnership through interest-based problem solving or interest-based bargaining. 

But when the process bogs down, the 2015 National Agreement provides a way for managers, physicians, union leaders and frontline workers represented by a coalition union to move it forward: issue resolution. 

Section 1 of the National Agreement covers a number of topics: how the partnership operates, unit-based teams, and such programs as Total Health and Workplace Safety. The most common disputes encountered are covered by this section. A new issue resolution process, one of three related provisions in the agreement, covers such disputes.

The process starts at the level at which an issue arises; so, for example: 

  • When disagreements arise at the facility level, the parties directly involved meet and use interest-based problem solving to try to resolve the issue themselves.
  • If they cannot do that within 30 days, the issue may be referred to the local LMP Council.
  • If there’s still no resolution, the next step is the Regional Council, and then national LMP leadership. Each body has 30 days to resolve the issue, using interest-based problem solving.
  • If no solution can be reached, the question may be decided by a joint panel that includes a neutral designee.

This process is an alternative to, but does not replace, existing grievance procedures. It offers another approach to problem solving. 

“It’s easy for people to get dug into their own place on an issue,” says Denise Duncan, president of UNAC/UHCP. “Partnership and the National Agreement commit us to spending the time to figure out jointly how to resolve problems and do the work.”

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New Book Spotlights Partnership Success

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 03/06/2017 - 15:51
Role
Request Number
LERA book article_pc3.pw.cmo.doc
Long Teaser

A 2016 book published by Cornell University Press and the Labor and Employnent Relations Association includes three chapters on the Labor Management Partnership. Read excerpts and get a link.

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Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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Leading Change Together

Read the chapter by Jim Pruitt, vice president of labor relations for the Permanente Federation, and Paul Cohen, LMP senior business consultant, that explains the conditions that gave rise to the partnership—and how partnership achieves results. 

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After 20 years, Labor Management Partnership still draws followers from health care and beyond
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When the leaders of Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions shook hands on their Labor Management Partnership 20 years ago, they weren’t sure where it would take them. Today, it is the largest, longest-running partnership of its kind. It is also the most studied by university researchers.

A new book published by the Labor and Employment Relations Association (LERA) and Cornell University Press shows that the partnership remains a model for workplace innovation. “The Evolving Healthcare Landscape: How Employees, Organizations, and Institutions are Adapting and Innovating” devotes three chapters to LMP’s history, accomplishments and challenges.

Lessons for others

Adrienne Eaton and Rebecca Givan, professors at Rutgers University, and Peter Lazes, a director and researcher at The City University of New York, studied six health care partnerships, including LMP. They were struck by:

“…the extent to which unions have been proactive in driving [all] these efforts....Another development in health care partnerships has been a significant deepening of the role of labor relations staff in operational matters.

“It is [also] important to note that the cases described here have influenced one another because the key stakeholders have directly learned from each other....[For example,] union and management stakeholders in Los Angeles [Department of Health Services and SEIU Local 721] as well as union leaders from the University of Vermont Medical Center have looked to Kaiser for answers.”

Another chapter, by Jody Gittell of Brandeis University and KP Northwest staff members Joan Resnick, Sarah Lax and Eliana Temkin, reports on regional efforts to promote collaboration across work teams. KP was selected for the study in part for what the authors call its “record of leadership and innovation [including] in patient care delivery, health information systems and labor-management relations.” Several strategies, including “living room huddles”—an informal, building-wide get-together—and job shadowing across departments led to higher employee engagement and patient satisfaction scores.

An inside look

The chapter “Leading Change Together” by Jim Pruitt, vice president of labor relations for the Permanente Federation, and Paul Cohen, LMP senior business consultant, explains the conditions that gave rise to the partnership, the need to implement it consistently across the organization and the way it achieves results:

“By bringing together diverse points of view and providing a framework for joint problem solving, the Labor Management Partnership has helped Kaiser Permanente tackle difficult issues....The partnership formed because conditions demanded change. It has endured because it has achieved measurable results. And it continues to flex and grow because we follow a few key principles and practices [including] self-directed work teams, interest-based problem solving and honest conversations.”

All of which explains why outside experts continue to take an interest in the joint efforts of KP and the union coalition. Pruitt and Cohen quote Thomas Kochan, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management, who put it this way in a 2013 study:

“Kaiser Permanente is now one of the nation’s leaders in the use of frontline teams to improve health care delivery....The Labor Management Partnership continues to serve…as a model for health care delivery and improvement.”

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Meet Your National Agreement: New Standards for All

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 12/07/2016 - 13:46
Region
Hank
Request Number
sty_Meet Your National Agreement_new standards
Long Teaser

The 2015 National Agreement sets out several new provisions for unit-based teams, facilities and regions. Make sure you know how to keep improving performance. 

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Non-LMP
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Sherry Crosby
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Resources: Help Your Team Make the Grade

Three things you can do to up your team’s game:

  • Talk with your UBT consultants and union partnership representatives (UPRs) for advice.
  • Contact the Patient Advisory Councils in your facility, service area or region for guidelines on how to include the voice of the customer in your work.
  • Use UBT Tracker and the new Team-Tested Practices section to find successful practices from other teams or regions.
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Meet Your National Agreement: New Standards For All
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Teams, facilities and regions all play a role in improvement
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Last year, the outpatient procedure unit-based team at Capitol Hill Medical Center rewrote the instructions it sends to patients scheduled
for a colonoscopy. A patient who found the earlier directions confusing played a leading role in the process.

The new instructions helped reduce by 20 percent the number of colonoscopies that needed to be repeated. Involving the patient was “a transformational experience
for the team,” says Jennifer Walker, RN, lead UBT consultant and improvement advisor in the Mid-Atlantic States region.

It also showed the power of a new provision of the 2015 National Agreement. 

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What Is Partnership? tyra.l.ferlatte Sun, 10/23/2016 - 20:53
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Long Teaser

A brief overview and explanation of our Labor Management Partnership. 

Story body part 1

The Labor Management Partnership is an operational strategy shared by Kaiser Permanente and the Partnership unions. 

This joint commitment is designed to: 

  • deliver high-quality care and service to Kaiser Permanente members and patients
  • continuously improve performance as measured by national standards
  • involve unions and individual frontline workers in decisions about how to deliver the best care
  • make KP more affordable by removing waste from care delivery systems
  • preserve and improve upon industry-leading benefits and working conditions for employees

The partnership is jointly led and funded by Kaiser Permanente and two groups of Partnership unions, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and the Alliance of Health Care Unions. There are more than 128,000 employees represented by the union locals that are part of the partnership, 16,000 managers and 21,000 physicians. 

Results for KP members and patients

Our Labor Management Partnership has delivered measurable results for KP members and patients. Most of the day-to-day work of the partnership is led by self-directed work teams — what we call unit-based teams (UBTs) — made up of frontline managers, employees and physicians. All teams are measured quarterly on several dimensions of performance, leadership and engagement. According to KP’s 2017 People Pulse survey, highly engaged UBTs have achieved:

  • 4 percent improvement in patient satisfaction
  • 13 percent fewer lost work days
  • 18 percent fewer workplace injuries

 

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Developing
Quick Takeaways

Want to share information about the Labor Management Partnership with others? Check out these two tools. 

 

Where No One Has Gone Before

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 17:00
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
Request Number
hank32_nationalagreement_final.docx
Long Teaser

How the new National Agreement was crafted, and how interest-based bargaining led to a result that could not have been achieved otherwise.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Joan Mah of Northern California (above), an optometrist, senior UBT consultant, and ESC-IFPTE Local 20 steward and vice president, was a first-time observer at the 2012 bargaining sessions.
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Tips and Tools

Get the highlights of the National Agreement in this overview, and check out these six tips on using the interest-based process.

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How interest-based bargaining and our new National Agreement set us apart from the crowd
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Many of the several hundred health care workers who gathered at the Manhattan Beach Marriott on May 10 are used to working through the night—it goes with their jobs. But they aren’t used to waiting. By midnight, some were napping on the couches in the lobby. Others milled about in small groups, talking quietly. And some retired to their rooms and asked friends to call them if and when anything happened.

Finally, around 2 a.m., the news came: A subgroup had ironed out the final details. By 3 a.m., the hotel’s central ballroom was filled with cheering, hugging workers—and supervisors, middle managers and senior vice presidents. The 140 management and union negotiators who formed the Common Issues Committee (CIC) gave their unanimous thumbs-up to a new National Agreement that will guide the work of some 130,000 workers, managers and physicians in the nation’s largest private health system.

“It was like we had just won the World Series,” says Alan Kroll, director of the Clinical Contact Center in Colorado and a first-time member of the CIC. “We’d had our ups and downs as a team, but in the end, we all came through as a team. The energy and camaraderie was tremendous.”

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

“The energy of the room was not because we liked each other. It was because of the respect that partnership had brought,” says Ashwin Deo, an orthopedic technician in Sacramento and SEIU UHW member who served on the CIC.

The agreement, reached in the course of five three-day sessions from March to May, is the largest private-sector labor agreement negotiated in the United States this year. Like previous National Agreements, it covers not only wages and benefits but also goals related to service, quality, affordability, workforce and community health, and more. 

Yet how the CIC reached the agreement is even more remarkable than the agreement itself. Rather than engage in a power struggle, the negotiators used interest-based bargaining to solve problems. That process allowed it to focus on solutions to the biggest issue facing health care today—that it costs too much, and too few Americans can afford it—while maintaining Kaiser Permanente’s industry-leading wages and benefits.

Rather than chopping care or benefits to control costs, says John August, executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, the agreement “provides union members with the tools to tackle cost by improving care and efficiency. Improved care and efficiency, delivered by workers at the front line, are the key to extending quality care to every person in our country.”

“Our national bargaining is unique,” says Dennis Dabney, the senior vice president of National Labor Relations and the lead management negotiator. “There is not only a group of labor negotiators at the table, but a broad cross-section of our employees providing recommendations on how to better deliver high-quality, affordable care and ensure Kaiser Permanente is a great place to work well into the future.”

Moreover, the outcome is a testament to the interest-based approach to partnership, not just interest-based bargaining.

“As our facilitators told us, economic issues are tough to resolve in interest-based bargaining,” says Adam Nemer, care delivery finance officer in the Northwest and a member of the bargaining subgroup that focused on benefits. “In the end, we met both management and labor's key interests. But I suspect that was not just because of what happened at the benefits table. It was also the result of an open and honest dialogue on benefits between senior labor and management leaders over the past few years. It was about trust and transparency. In my view, we didn’t reach a solution just because of interest-based bargaining—but we couldn’t have gotten there without it.”

Revolutionary healthy workforce plan

As part of the solution to controlling costs, the agreement includes a revolutionary plan to create the healthiest workforce in the health care industry. Beginning in 2013, the agreement will reward the collective workforce achievement of reduced health risk factors, measured by body mass index (BMI), cholesterol levels, blood pressure levels, smoking rates and workplace injury rates.

“Unions and management agreed that health improvement is an essential strategy for reducing chronic conditions—one of the leading drivers of rising, unsustainable cost,” says SEIU UHW President Dave Regan. “This is a high-road, long-term strategy for the common good.”

Those involved in the process say it’s unlikely that the high road would have been taken had these been traditional, adversarial negotiations. As Joan Mah, an optometrist at San Rafael Medical Center in Northern California and a first-time observer representing her ESC-IFPTE Local 20 colleagues, put it: “Traditional bargaining is really about what I want and not about what is right….When you take the time to allow management and labor to surface their interests, it’s really looking for a global solution.”

“At times it was frustrating, but it was also interesting to see how the interest-based process led us to options we could work with,” says Jean Melnikoff, a senior director of human resources for Southern California, one of the management co-chairs of the workforce of the future subgroup.

Opening doors—and minds

Her sentiment was echoed by members of every subgroup. But that is not to say the process is easy.

“When things get difficult, you need to regroup and work your way through it,” says Arlene Peasnall, senior vice president of human resources in Southern California. “But you end up with better results and stronger relationships.”

“The people who’d done it before said, ‘It’s OK, it can be done,’” says orthopedic technician Deo. “Don’t be afraid of the tension in the room. Don’t be afraid of emotions, because that’s what gets creativity out….When labor and management are at the table, talking to each other as equals, and the ideas are valued equally—I think that opened a lot of doors. And minds, too.”

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