Individual unions

‘Problems Are Only Opportunities…’

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 03/14/2017 - 17:42
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Hank
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sty_problems are opportunities_Hank50
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Disagreements among teammates suck up time and energy. The National Agreement offers a solution that fuels creative problem solving: the issue resolution process. 

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Linda Hansen, RN, a public health nurse and UNAC/UHCP member with patient Madeline Lanell Haxton
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‘Problems Are Only Opportunities…’
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Solving disagreements using partnership tools frees teams to focus on improving quality and service
Story body part 1

Management and union representatives in Southern California were at odds when they gathered in March 2015 to settle a UNAC/UHCP grievance over the working conditions of registered nurses in Home Health, Hospice and Palliative Care. 

Because of the dispute’s complexity and scope, involving nurses regionwide, it was moved from the grievance process into issue resolution.

“When they started, it was the Mason-Dixon Line. It was management on one side and labor on the other side,” recalls Marcia Meredith, who works as a neutral facilitator in Southern California. She gets called on when “sticky and contentious” issues come up involving the Labor Management Partnership, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year. “It was pretty tense.”

Months later, managers and union representatives were working side by side, forging consensus on key issues. 

Key to their success was the issue resolution (IR) process spelled out as part of the partnership between the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions and Kaiser Permanente. It incorporates interest-based problem solving (IBPS) and consensus decision making (CDM) to provide a framework for settling disagreements collaboratively—providing a modern-day take on Henry J. Kaiser's line, “Problems are only opportunities in work clothes.” 

Bringing order to chaos

They also benefited from the fact that Southern California—after watching people struggle for months and sometimes years without resolving their problems—recently had clarified how the process was to be used and had added a clear path for escalating issues.  

“Issue resolution helps you focus on what the problem is and the possible solutions,” says Meredith.

The nurses and managers eventually agreed to make changes to assignment workflows, improve communication and enhance training opportunities for frontline workers. “They came up with good things that they’re still using,” says Meredith. 

Crafting Southern California's appeals process took months of hard work. Key stakeholders included regional LMP Council members, coalition union leaders and Human Resources administrators.

Before escalation changes took effect on Jan. 1, 2015, the issue resolution process had tended to spin out of control. 

‘It was like the Wild West’

“It was like the Wild West. Everybody did their own thing,” recalls Ilda Luna, an SEIU-UHW service representative for Glendale Medical Offices in Southern California. 

Alex Espinoza, the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Union’s national coordinator for Southern California, agrees.

“People would email whomever they thought would resolve the issue,” he says, citing examples of individuals who leapfrogged layers of union and management intervention to appeal directly to leaders at the national level.

During national bargaining in 2015, Southern California representatives shared the region’s appeals process, and the subgroup working on the issue recommended a similar process be created in every region.

The approach calls for resolving issues at the lowest possible level. For stubborn disagreements, there is now a standardized process for escalation the aggrieved parties can turn to, with 30-day deadlines for resolution at every step of the way.

In Southern California, for issues that can’t be resolved at the facility level, a nine-member regional SWAT team made up of management and union representatives serves as a court of last resort before the matter heads to national leaders. 

But since the process was adopted two years ago and local LMP Councils and union leaders were educated about how to use it, no issue has been referred to the regional team. 

That’s good news, says Maryanne Malzone Miller, senior director of Human Resources in Southern California and a SWAT team member. 

“I like to believe we’re pushing it to the level where it should be resolved,” Miller says. 

“It’s a success,” agrees Espinoza, also a SWAT team member. “Folks are engaged and are talking to each other.”

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Issue Resolution: Tips From a Union Leader

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 03/14/2017 - 16:01
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Hank
tips_issue resolution_union leader_Hank50

Insider tips from a union leader about how to ensure workers' voices are heard during the issue resolution process. 

Sherry Crosby
Tyra Ferlatte
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Issue Resolution: Tips From a Union Leader

Format:
PDF (color or black and white)

Size:
8.5" x 11" 

Intended audience:
Union members, stewards and leaders. 

Best used:
Use this tip sheet to help you prepare for taking part in the issue resolution process.

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Be Healthy, Change Lives: Uchechi Nwokorie

Topic
Request Number
video_148_total_health_uchechi_nwokorie
Long Teaser

A Kaiser Permanente employee shares her journey to better health — and how she is now helping her teammates do the same.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Download File URL
http://content.jwplatform.com/videos/7R3wiliz-iq13QL4R.mp4
Running Time
1:26
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Released
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After her son is diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, a Kaiser Permanente clinical assistant makes it her mission to ensure her family—and her team members at work—are living healthy.

 

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Working as Equals

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VID-152_Working_as_Equals
Long Teaser

Four years ago, the Rancho Cucamonga Medical Offices formally adopted a team-based model of care. Today physicians and union workers say they don't want to work any other way.

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Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Download File URL
VID-152_Working_as_Equals/VID-152_Working_as_Equals.mp4.zip
Running Time
3:13
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Released
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Four years ago, several departments at the Rancho Cucamonga Medical Offices formally adopted a model of team-based care. The transition took effort and time, but today physicians and union workers at the facility say they wouldn't want to work any other way. See how team-based care made the medical offices a better place to work and receive care.

 

 

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Strength in Numbers

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sldshw_vid_136_strength_in_numbers
Long Teaser

A Physical Therapy unit-based team in the Mid-Atlantic States discovers the power that comes from involving every team member.

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Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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Running Time
1:42
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A Physical Therapy unit-based team discovers the power that comes from engaging every team member.

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How-To Guide: Workforce Development

Looking to advance your career? Check out these LMP career planning resources — and help share the information:

  • Download fliers for promoting career counseling, classes and financial aid available to union workers at Kaiser Permanente.
  • Post fliers on bulletin boards in breakrooms and other areas to steer eligible workers to the two LMP-supported education trust funds and KP's Career Planning website.
  • Read and share the stories to learn more about workforce development at KP and hear success stories from frontline workers.
Be Healthy, Change Lives: Marian Miles Kellie Applen Tue, 12/20/2016 - 13:56
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VID-150_Be_Healthy_Change_Lives/VID-150_Be_Healthy_Change_Lives.zip
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video_147_total_health_marian_miles
Running Time
1:21
Long Teaser

A Kaiser Permanente employee shares her journey to better health, and how she is now helping her teammates do the same.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Status
Released
Date of publication

After suffering from a serious digestive disorder, Marian Miles was inspired to take better care of her health. She changed her diet, became more active, and is now helping her San Diego co-workers change their lives too.

 

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From the Desk of Henrietta: Performance Is a Union Issue

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 11/29/2016 - 14:46
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Hank
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sty_Henrietta_Hank49_aidanguest
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Guest columnist Michael Aidan of IFPTE Local 20 makes the case for more workers' voices in our joint efforts to improve service and quality at Kaiser Permanente. 

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Non-LMP
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Non-LMP
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Performance: A Union Issue
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How to remove roadblocks to workers' participation
Story body part 1

Henrietta is on vacation. This guest column is by Michael Aidan, who represents clinical lab scientists and others in Northern California. He chaired the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions executive board in 2014–2015.

Workers—and the unions that represent them—care about performance. Kaiser Permanente employees come to work to ensure patients and members deliver the highest quality of care and service. Everything they do, almost without exception, is focused on this. 

So I was dismayed when I recently attended KP’s Associate Improvement Advisor training, meant specifically for frontline workers, and saw very few union faces at the table. I know that many would want that training. And I believe employers should recognize the benefits—and justice—of having frontline workers with an equal voice in performance improvement.

Our National Agreement provides a vehicle for union workers to be actively engaged in performance
 improvement. Unit-based teams, co-led by union members, are embedded in KP operations. Yet union members run into roadblocks when seeking training or a seat at the strategic planning table. That lessens the contributions all workers could be making—and discourages many from fully engaging with their teams.

Our coalition is stepping up efforts with KP to expand opportunities for workers in performance improvement efforts, enable workers and unions to help shape needed innovations, and build union capacity to give workers the tools and support they need.

This will remove barriers we face that have outlived their time, and enhance patient care and service.

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