Labor Management Partnership Celebrates 20th Year
California Gov. Jerry Brown congratulates LMP on its success and praises it for making the Golden State a better place to live and raise our families.
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California Gov. Jerry Brown congratulates LMP on its success and praises it for making the Golden State a better place to live and raise our families.
Voices from the front lines, reflecting on LMP's 20th anniversary—looking back on the past and on to the future.
As we celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Labor Management Partnership, Hank would like to call out the tens of thousands of individuals who have made partnership a success: the frontline workers, managers and physicians who have believed in our ideals and taken the time to build the positive working relationships that are the backbone of this groundbreaking endeavor.
Visit Humans of Partnership to read their stories—and look through their eyes into our past, our present and our future.
How a shared appreciation of each other’s different skills and background helps this unit-based team succeed.
Mutual respect sustains these National Claims UBT co-leads over the long haul.
The Labor Management Partnership often is described as a journey. You never know where it’s going to take you next. But it also has a few rules of the road that help us find our way.
Inspired by the United States Constitution, we take a comic look at the founding of the Labor Management Partnership.
In 1997, forward-looking leaders of Kaiser Permanente and 26 unions took a chance on a different way of working--in partnership. After 20 years, our Labor Management Partnership has proved to be a game-changer. See how we are marking 20 years of partnership.
Forty percent of U.S. marriages end in divorce after an average of eight years. Most business partnerships fail to meet expectations. And most campaigns end when they achieve their goals or the world moves on.
But the Labor Management Partnership between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions has beaten the odds: October 2017 marks the 20th anniversary of the partnership’s founding, making it by far the largest, longest-running and most sweeping such partnership in the country.
We’ve accomplished a lot together. And in a world of change, sustaining a healthy long-term relationship is an achievement in itself. A key to our success has been the willingess to honestly reflect on our successes, failures, and opportunities to improve.
By working in partnership, says Kaiser Permanente Chairman and CEO Bernard Tyson, “We have tapped into the potential of smart people all over the organization coming here every single day trying to figure out, ‘How do I improve quality, how do I improve service, how do I improve affordability?’ That’s an incredible competitive advantage for the organization.”
This fall Kaiser Permanente and the union coalition will be celebrating those achievements with special events and employee outreach. It won’t be all cake and balloons, however. LMP regional councils, unit-based team sponsors and co-leads, and others will host reflection sessions where workers, managers and physicians can share their experiences, pain points and suggestions for the future of partnership. Participants will consider three questions:
Partnership is not easy, and the parties don’t always agree on things. So what’s kept it going?
“It’s nice if we can all get along,” says Tyson. “But most important, we’re here to get results.” Here are some of the results achieved in partnership:
All of the above have garnered attention from business, union and academic leaders over the years.
“The Labor Management Partnership is a shining example of how you bring labor and management together to produce results,” said Liz Shuler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO. “What I love about this model is the notion that, no matter where you work in the system, you have a place at the table and your voice is heard.”
Working in partnership also holds lessons that apply outside of work—including lessons that might have saved some of those failed marriages.
“If you are going to be a good partner and have a successful relationship, with a partner, kids, friends,” says a facilitator from 2015 national bargaining, “you have to have your partner’s needs in mind as well as your own.”
To learn more about LMP anniversary activities, visit the 20th Anniversary How-to Guide.