Contracts & Agreements

Past National Agreements

A series of national labor agreements between Kaiser Permanente and the Partnership unions have used the interest-based bargaining process to achieve industry-leading results. The first was in 2000, three years after the Labor Management Partnership was founded; subsequent agreements followed in 2005 (with a re-opener in 2008), 2010, 2012 and 2015, each building on the previous and developing fresh innovations. 

Negotiations in 2018 resulted in the 2018 KP-Alliance National Agreement, which runs through Sept. 30, 2021.

2005 National Agreement

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Sun, 10/23/2016 - 00:55
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The contract that created unit-based teams. 

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The 2005 agreement was remarkable for its creation of unit-based teams to drive frontline performance improvement, with the teams co-led by a unit's manager, a union-represented staff member and, where applicable, a physician. The agreement also beefed up workforce development. It was in force from Oct. 1, 2005, to Sept. 30, 2010.

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Ebola Education and Safety Agreement

This 2014 agreement lays out measures to train and protect caregivers treating Ebola patients.

Agreement Between the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and Kaiser Permanente

December 15, 2015

1. As both Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions agree, the threat and fear around caring for a patient with Ebola is a fact that must be addressed. The parties believe that by remaining calm and educating our employees/members, we can work together to ensure that the employees are prepared through knowledge and trai ning to care for an Ebola patient. The Employer and the Union are committed to work together to effectively implement CDC guidelines related to Ebola. In the event the guidelines change, the parties will meet, review and bargain the effect of said changes. In addition, the parties will develop joint communications for all employees and when Kaiser Permanente's national guideline is more protect ive than the CDC and Cal OSHA guidelines, Kaiser Permanente's national guidelines shall prevail. In no event will Kaiser Permanente's national guidelines be a lower standard than the CDC. In California, the receiving hospitals will meet Cal/OSHA regulations and guidelines, including Interim Guidance on Ebola Virus in Inpatient Hospital Settings and the Aerosol Transmissible Diseases Standard. In addition, facilities must follow applicable OSHA or local public health requirements.

2. In reference to number 1 above, the Employer will ensure sufficient levels of all required PPE in the ambulatory setting, Emergency Department and Inpatient settings. All trained employees have the opportunity to regularly practice these skills with drills, simulat ions or other relevant activities.

3. All staff with the potential to interact with, care for, or do terminal cleaning/waste handling for suspected Ebola patients, or those with a positive diagnosis, shall receive paid time for the purpose of

a)      education on Ebola to include but not limited to:

i)        pathophysiology
ii)       signs and symptoms
iii)      care and treatment of the patient
iv)      proper donning and doffing of PPE
v)       simulation of actual care e.g. IV starts while donned, etc.
vi)      proper disposal of body fluids and waste
vii)     terminal cleaning of isolation rooms in the ambulatory, Emergency Department and Inpatient settings
viii)    the appropriate duration of time in room or in PPE, per KP guidelines and CDC, Cal OSHA, and OSHA standards
ix)      proper protocols for intake areas

b)       such training shall be paid training time by the Em ployer with backfill for those in training

4. The CDC recommends that there are Ebola teams to care for patients. Ebola teams will be selected in alignment with National HR policy 043

a)      volunteers first; in the event there are insufficient volunteers, then
b)      team member selection shall be identified by the parties at the local level

5. In the event an employee is excluded from work or receives care as a result of occupational exposure to Ebola, the employee will receive Paid Administrative Time Off, and all medical costs will be covered through Employee Health and Workers' Compensation in accordance with HR Policy 042 Exposure to Ebola. In addition, if psychological support is needed , all employee costs shall be covered under Workers ' Compensation and/or the employee's health plan benefits in effect at the time of the injury.  Paid Administrative Leave shall be considered time worked for purposes of benefits accrual.

6. In each region, joint communication plans will be put into place or continue, as appropriate.

7. In the event there is a dispute over the above, a designated CKPU Member Union Representative and the local Ebola KP site manager will convene a meeting within 24 hours to resolve the dispute within one meeting. 

Download a PDF of the agreement with signatures. 

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tyra.l.ferlatte Fri, 10/07/2016 - 14:22
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A plan covering workers caring for Ebola patients. 

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1997 Labor Management Partnership Agreement

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 10/05/2016 - 17:52
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LMPSITE-1151
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Read the revolutionary agreement that created the LMP. 

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This landmark agreement between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions established the Labor Management Partnership and laid out the core principles, structures and commitments that guide it.

October 1997

Purpose

Health care services and the institutions that provide them are undergoing rapid change. Advances in health care and the explosive growth of for-profit health care businesses present challenges as well as opportunities for Kaiser Permanente, the unions, and the members they represent. Kaiser Permanente and the undersigned labor organizations believe that now is the time to enter into a new way of doing business. Now is the time to unite around our common purposes and work together to most effectively deliver high quality health care and prevail in our new, highly competitive environment.

As social benefit membership organizations, founded on the principle of making life better for those we serve, it is our common goal to make Kaiser Permanente the pre-eminent deliverer of health care in the United States. It is further our goal to demonstrate by any measure that labor-management collaboration produces superior health care outcomes, market leading competitive performance, and a superior workplace for Kaiser Permanente employees.

In this spirit and with this intent, Kaiser Permanente and the undersigned labor organizations agree to establish a Partnership in pursuit of our common goals to:

  • Improve quality health care for Kaiser Permanente members and the communities we serve;
  • Assist Kaiser Permanente in achieving and maintaining market leading competitive performance;
  • Make Kaiser Permanente a better place to work;
  • Expand Kaiser Permanente's membership in current and new markets, including designation as a provider of choice for all labor organizations in the areas we serve;
  • Provide Kaiser Permanente employees with the maximum possible employment and income security within Kaiser Permanente and/or the health care field;
  • Involve employees and their unions in decisions.

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Standing Agreements

Enduring guidelines for our work

The Labor Management Partnership is governed by a series of agreements between Kaiser Permanente and its Partnership unions. The 1997 Partnership Agreement established its founding goals and principles; it is the foundational document for the partnership between KP and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. The 2018 Alliance Labor Management Partnership Agreement establishes the guidelines for the partnership between KP and the Alliance of Health Care Unions. 

 

tyra.l.ferlatte Wed, 10/05/2016 - 17:29

KP, Coalition Reach Accord on Tentative 2015 National Agreement

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Sun, 06/07/2015 - 16:03
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After 10 weeks of interest-based bargaining, representatives for Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions gave approval to the tentative 2015 National Agreement.

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Testing for consensus: Members of the Common Issues Committee give the LMP "thumbs-up" to show their approval of an item under discussion during bargaining.
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Ten weeks of national bargaining between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions concluded Saturday, June 6, when 150 union and management representatives approved a tentative 2015 National Agreement. The agreement now goes to the 28 union locals that compose the coalition for ratification and to Kaiser Permanente senior leaders for approval.

The three-year tentative agreement is designed to help unionized workers and managers achieve quality, affordability and safety of care; prepare for jobs of the future; and develop innovative solutions to health care challenges. The agreement also will enable our 3,500 unit-based teams to better deliver award-winning care and service to Kaiser Permanente’s more than 10 million members and patients.

“This is an outstanding agreement that deepens our ability to provide affordable, high-quality care to our members and patients,” says Dennis Dabney, the senior vice president of National Labor Relations and Office of the Labor Management Partnership. “Kaiser Permanente leads the industry because it is a great place to work and a great place to receive care—and the two are inseparable.”

“We’re on year 18 of a remarkably successful strategy,” says Hal Ruddick, executive director of union coalition. “Our contract is better than ever, Kaiser Permanente’s quality and service scores are higher than ever, and the organization and unions are both healthy and growing. Partnership pays off for workers, consumers and mission-driven organizations like Kaiser Permanente.”

Agreement highlights

The agreement includes wage increases in each year of the agreement (see specifics below), provides operational flexibility and bolsters joint problem-solving capabilities. It builds on the successful 2012 National Agreement, strengthening provisions for workplace health and safety, providing additional funds for workforce training and development and ensuring the consistent application of partnership principles.

The new three-year tentative agreement includes:

  • Across-the-board wage increases in each year of the agreement: All employees in Northern and Southern California represented by a coalition union receive 3 percent increases in the first two years and 4 percent in the third year. Employees in the regions outside of California represented by a coalition union will receive a 2 percent increase each year of the three-year agreement. In addition, they will receive a 1 percent increase at the end of the third year.
  • Enhancements to benefits such as dental coverage, life insurance and tuition reimbursement. The tuition reimbursement was increased to $3,000 per employee per year. For the first time, tuition, dental coverage and life insurance are standardized for coalition union members across all regions.
  • A long-term solution that protects retiree medical benefits for current and future retirees, with no net increase to retirees’ out-of-pocket expenses, while reducing liabilities associated with those benefits.
  • Increased funding to the Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust and the SEIU UHW-West and Joint Employer Education Fund to ensure career development for Kaiser Permanente’s diverse workforce.
  • Improved methods for assessing unit-based team performance and for spreading and adopting successful practices.
  • Updates to our groundbreaking Kaiser Permanente Total Health Incentive Plan,  which rewards employees for healthy behavior and provides incentives for collective improvement.
  • Joint participation on community health projects by the coalition unions in KP’s local and regional Community Benefit programs.

Next steps

Our agreement is the largest private-sector contract in the United States this year. Once it is approved by Kaiser Permanente senior leaders and ratified by union members this summer, it will take effect Oct. 1, 2015, and be in effect through Sept. 30, 2018.

The impact of the agreement “goes beyond the words on paper,” says Jerry Vincent, the Northern California region’s director of Labor Relations. “It lays the foundation for us to continue to provide quality, affordable care for many years.”

“There were some tough moments,” Denise Duncan, RN, the executive vice president of UNAC/UHCP, says of the negotiations. “But people came back together. It was a reminder that our national agreement—and our partnership—is very strong, and we keep making it better. There’s nothing like it anywhere else.”

For more information, see www.bargaining2015.org.

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Bargaining Team Takes On Operations, Service

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 05/14/2015 - 21:10
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How to take KP operations, unit-based teams and the Labor Management Partnership to the next level? A joint bargaining team suggests answers.

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Angela Young (right), an SEIU-UHW member, and Donna Young, with The Permanente Medical Group (center), discuss proposals in the Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership subgroup.
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Better in Partnership

Workers, managers and physicians have improved operations in partnership. See how:

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Improving performance and strengthening partnership is the work of the Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership subgroup—one of three subgroups in national bargaining.

At the third session of national bargaining, members of the subgroup made recommendations on topics including improving learning, accountability, problem solving, consistency, flexibility and support for unit-based teams.

The many perspectives represented at the table—with all regions and a wide range of job types in the mix—enriched the group’s discussions.

“We are really making progress. We’re having good discussions that can help people back at work overcome barriers in their day-to-day UBT work and make their lives easier and better,” says Holly Davenport, a union representative for UFCW Local 770 in Southern California. The group is investigating ways to improve the spread of practices from one team to another and to ensure that UBT assessments accurately reflect performance.

One LMP

The subgroup is also looking at ways to improve partnership at all levels of Kaiser Permanente and at the elements—from tools to training—that affect its success.

“Our group is trying to establish the principles of partnership and ensure they’re applied consistently across regions,” says Rita Essaian, an executive administrator with Southern California Permanente Medical Group.

“No matter what region you’re in, the partnership should be the same,” says Ruby Robley, a respiratory therapist at Antioch Medical Center in Northern California and an SEIU-UHW member. “We need One LMP, just like One KP.”

First-timers excel

Many of this year’s negotiators are new to bargaining in partnership, including manager Casper Yu, the director of Dental Sales and Marketing in the Northwest. “I love how this process works,” he says. “We negotiate and still come out with great personal and working relationships. I tell people, ‘This is what it truly means to be in partnership. I get it now.’”

Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership is one of three subgroups tasked with crafting the next National Agreement. The other two are Total Health and Workplace Safety and Work of the Future.

Visit bargaining2015.org for more information, videos and slideshows and to sign up for bargaining updates.

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The Value of a Healthy, Happy Workforce

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Thu, 04/30/2015 - 15:21
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Finding ways to help Kaiser Permanente employees enjoy long, healthy, productive lives is the mission of the Total Health and Workplace Safety subgroup at national bargaining.

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The Total Health and Workplace Safety subgroup is co-led by (left to right) Kathy Gerwig, a KP vice president, Meg Niemi, president of SEIU Local 49 and Lisa Dupell (not shown) of UFCW Local 555. Niemi and Dupell are both based in the Northwest.
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Tips and Tools

These resources will help you and your team create a healthy, safe workplace.

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Finding ways to help Kaiser Permanente employees enjoy long, healthy, productive lives is the mission of the Total Health and Workplace Safety subgroup.

The subgroup, one of three in national bargaining this year, will expand upon the achievements of the 2012 National Agreement. It will also address how Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions can partner to improve the total health of the communities we serve.

Delivering exceptional care and service and supporting a healthier, injury-free workforce go hand in hand.We can’t provide quality, affordable care to our members and communities unless we first provide a safe and respectful environment that promotes the collective health of our workforce,” says Kathy Gerwig, Kaiser Permanente’s vice president of employee safety, health and wellness and the management co-lead for the subgroup.

Personal and collective health

In 2012, negotiators established the groundbreaking Total Health Incentive Plan. The wellness program encourages employees to assess their own health and aim for collective improvement in measures like cholesterol and body mass index. In addition, healthy employees can serve as role models for Kaiser Permanente patients.

This year, the parties will suggest ways to create a healthier, safer work environment by improving employee access to services such as wellness coaching and better understanding trends in workplace violence and prevention. Another goal is to encourage employees to eat healthily, exercise at breaks and prevent workplace violence and intimidation.  

Expanding wellness to communities

In a first for national bargaining, the subgroup will also suggest ways to bring a holistic approach to wellness into communities Kaiser Permanente serves, especially those with limited access to healthy food, affordable health services and places to exercise.

“Our union members tend to live in communities that have high needs around health or issues around violence,” says Meg Niemi, the president of SEIU Local 49 and also a union co-lead for the subgroup. “So our members have an interest in their communities being healthier and safer further upstream, before they need critical care.”

The other two subgroups tasked with crafting recommendations are Work of the Future and Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership. (For more on Work of the Future, watch this slideshow and read this article.) Negotiators are developing a tentative agreement that will become the National Agreement after it is approved by Kaiser Permanente leadership and ratified by union locals this summer.

Visit bargaining2015.org for more information, videos and slideshows, and to sign up for bargaining updates.

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National Bargaining in the News

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Mon, 04/27/2015 - 16:16
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Our one-of-a-kind negotiations, which got under way the last week of March, are getting attention in the press.

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National Bargaining in the News
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Sacramento Business Journal highlights our negotiations
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Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions began national bargaining on March 30and the negotiations have gotten attention from the press in California, including an article in the Sacramento Business Journal and a report on KQED public radio.

The negotiations are likely to be the largest private-sector contract talks in the United States this year. Some 150 negotiators are coming together from all over the country every two weeks through June to craft the new national agreement, which serves as the union contract for more than 100,000 Kaiser Permanente workers represented by coalition unions.

Hear from union members, management and union co-leads and see how the next national agreement is being created: Watch a three-minute video that captures the spirit of the National Bargaining kickoff and view this slideshow from the first negotiations.

Stay up to date at bargaining2015.org.

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Shaping the Workplace of Tomorrow

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Thu, 04/16/2015 - 16:38
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Equipping frontline workers with the skills and knowledge for tomorrow’s jobs—an essential element in preserving Kaiser Permanente’s competitive edge—is the focus of the Work of the Future subgroup at National Bargaining.

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For the main article, I'd like to change Hal's quote to make it more connected to the bargaining and why WTF is a bargaining subgroup:
“We have a huge new influx of members because of the Affordable Care Act. We have to meet their needs differently – and we can do that through our contract that we're bargaining this spring."
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Members of the Work of the Future subgroup at the March kickoff for 2015 National Bargaining in Southern California.
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Flexibility at Work

KP employees are already demonstrating the flexibility and resourcefulness needed to adapt swiftly and successfully to the changes coming to health care. See what ideas you can adapt for yourself and your team:

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Major topic at national bargaining is how to prepare frontline workers for the dramatic changes coming to health care
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Equipping frontline workers with the skills and knowledge for tomorrow’s jobs—an essential element in preserving Kaiser Permanente’s competitive edge—is the focus of the Work of the Future subgroup at National Bargaining.

The negotiations this year focus on three topics, in addition to wages and benefits:

  • Workforce planning
  • Training and development
  • Innovation and technology

“Health care is changing,” says Hal Ruddick, the executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions. “We have a huge new influx of members because of the Affordable Care Act. We have to meet their needs differently—and we can do that through the solutions we create bargaining in partnership.”

Planning for change

Flexibility, foresight and planning are essential to developing a workforce that is ready for coming changes in the health care industry, said Zeth Ajemian, the director of Workforce Planning and Development for Southern California and Hawaii.

“To prepare our workforce for the future, we need to align staffing with current care delivery transformation, innovation and new technologies that meet the evolving needs of our members,” he says. “We're entering a tremendous era of change. A portion or all of an employee's work will change and their skills, training and experience will need to change to fit that job.”

Creating career pathways that allow current KP employees to move into new roles is essential, says Brian Lockhart, security lead at Sunnyside Medical Center in the Northwest and a member of ILWU Local 28.

“We want some flexibility around the experience component,” says Lockhart, who explained that employees who have trained for new roles are sometimes unable to move into them because they don’t have the necessary work experience.

Role of technology

Leveraging technology to meet the emerging needs of our patients will be another key issue for the bargaining team, says Dennis Dabney, senior vice president of Labor Relations and the Labor Management Partnership.

“We need to decide how we bring that new technology into our work environment,” he says. “We need to react more to what our patients want, rather than what we want to give them.”

Whatever innovations are designed and implemented in the future, frontline workers need to be engaged from the start, say union partners.

“Kaiser Permanente is on that bullet train toward the future and if the labor movement is not on that train, we are going to be left behind,” says Janis Thorn, interim president of United Steelworkers Local 7600.

Work of the Future is one of three subgroups tasked with crafting the next National Agreement. The other two are Total Health and Workplace Safety, and Operational and Service Excellence in Partnership.

Visit bargaining2015.org for more information, videos and slideshows, and to sign up for bargaining updates.

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