LMP Concepts

Poster: Supreme Sponsor

Submitted by Andrea Buffa on Mon, 10/10/2016 - 16:02
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poster_supreme_sponsor

This poster, which appeared on the back cover of the Fall 2012 Hank, is a fun take on sponsorship, featuring a "supreme sponsor" action figure.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
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Poster: Supreme Sponsor

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size: 
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Share on bulletin boards, in break rooms and in other staff areas to provide a lighthearted look at sponsorship.

 

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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. 

Communicator
Non-LMP
Editor
Tyra Ferlatte
Classification
Long Teaser

A plan covering workers caring for Ebola patients. 

Topics

Doctor Makes House Calls to Help Teams Avoid Injuries

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Thu, 10/06/2016 - 17:25
Request Number
styslideshow_tiger team_workplace safety
Long Teaser

Inspired by his father's workplace injury, a Southern California physician helps foster a partnership approach to reducing workplace injuries. 

Communicator (reporters)
Sherry Crosby
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Doctor Makes House Calls to Help Teams Avoid Injuries
Deck
Father’s trauma inspires joint effort to create safer workplace
Story body part 1

Quan Nguyen, DO, learned in seventh grade how devastating a workplace injury can be. His father, a carpenter, severed part of his thumb when he lost control of the power saw he was using. The accident put him out of work for a time and forced the family to stretch its skintight budget even further.

Years later, the memory inspired him to join Orange County’s Workplace Safety Steering Committee, says Dr. Nguyen.

“I’ve witnessed, firsthand, how things at work can lead to pain and suffering for the person and his family,” says Dr. Nguyen, a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician at the Chapman Medical Offices in Orange, California. “We’re like a big family at work and I don’t want to see people hurt.”

Team visits worksites to improve safety

As the sole physician on the 12-member committee, Dr. Nguyen uses his singular perspective to engage physicians and others to build a culture of workplace health and safety.

“He’s very unique,” says Jim Ovieda, assistant medical group administrator and the committee’s management tri-chair. “He brings another voice of authority to the conversation.”

Four years ago, Dr. Nguyen helped form the Tiger Team, a task force of union members and managers who visit units with high injury rates and offer expert advice on how to reduce risks. They developed a simple process to identify and address workplace hazards at the local level (see “Five Tips for Workplace Safety Site Visits”).

“It’s not a punishment. We’re there to help departments succeed and to help our staff and physicians to be safe,” says Dr. Nguyen, who named the Tiger Team in honor of “Tigger,” the fictional tiger character who bounces around and helps others.

Collaborating with frontline union members is vital to keeping everyone safe, says Dr. Nguyen.

“There seems to be two cultures inside the hospital – the physician and non-physician. We’re trying to bridge those two cultures by bringing together a diversity of voices to improve the culture of health and safety for everyone,” says Dr. Nguyen. 

Host teams say the visits and ensuing discussions help create an environment where everyone feels comfortable speaking up—essential to building safety into daily work.

Partnership approach gets results

The team aims for six site visits a year and had conducted 31 visits as of November 2015. Most of those departments reported significantly fewer injuries in the months after the visit; many reduced injuries by 50 percent or more. The approach has gained attention region-wide and other medical centers in Southern California are adopting the practice. The team also presented its partnership approach at the 2016 National Workplace Safety Summit.

“It’s a way of taking the pulse of the department,” Ronald Jackson, a medical assistant, SEIU-UHW member and the steering committee’s labor tri-chair, says of the team's site visits.

“We bring a fresh set of eyes to the department,” says Albert Alota, workplace safety coordinator for Orange County.

Three practical solutions

Recently, the committee’s labor and management members sat side by side reviewing workplace safety records for the Irvine Medical Center’s recovery room. The department had accrued nine injuries in as many months, three of them involving employees and gurneys. The team identified several hazards related to work space and storage and recommended ways to fix them. For example:

  • To address heavy traffic down narrow hallways and around blind corners: Provide standardized traffic flow for gurneys, mirrors at key intersections and a recognized verbal cue to alert bystanders to passing gurneys and equipment
  • To unclog crowded patient bays that forced staff to work at laptops in busy hallways: Install wall-mounted computers and exam stools to replace the office chairs in the room
  • To reduce injuries caused by incorrect use of new gurneys: Ask vendors to help train staff how to safely operate new equipment

Employees appreciate the attention. “It’s good to have the team come in,” says Sol Estrella, RN, a staff nurse and UNAC/UHCP member. “It shows that management and higher-ups are responding to our staff needs.”

 

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1997 Labor Management Partnership Agreement

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 10/05/2016 - 17:52
Topics
Request Number
LMPSITE-1151
Long Teaser

Read the revolutionary agreement that created the LMP. 

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Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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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. 

 

Where No One Has Gone Before

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 17:00
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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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AIDET by the Letters

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:41
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hank31_AIDET_by_the_letters
Long Teaser

This sidebar story from the Spring 2012 Hank describes the meaning behind the AIDET acronym and how it can be used to improve customer service.

Communicator (reporters)
Non-LMP
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Eric Zambrano, left, RN, UNAC/UHCP with Demetria Verna, ward clerk/transcriber, SEIU UHW
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Patients Are Priority #1

Here are some more service resources to help you help your patients.

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AIDET By the letters
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Spelling out patient service
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It's a simple set of five letters, but it can pay big dividends when you're interacting with patients.

Let's spell it out and communicate our best.

Acknowledge—The first letter of the AIDET acronym reminds each staff member or care provider along the patient’s path to acknowledge his or her presence. Making eye contact with a patient or giving the member a smile is all that’s needed.

Introduce—When you identify yourself by name, you change the patient’s visit from an anonymous interaction into a personalized experience.

Duration—A little information goes a long way. Letting patients know how long a visit is expected to take lets them know their time is valued. If a doctor is running late or the lab is behind, letting patients know about the delay and keeping them updated shows respect.

Explanation—Whose body is it? No one likes it when a caregiver starts doing something without telling a patient what they’re doing and why.

Thank you—The last step wraps up the visit by thanking the patient for coming in or for providing the information needed to provide them with excellent care.

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Tips on Keeping Injury Rates Down, From KP's Leading Region Jennifer Gladwell Tue, 10/04/2016 - 16:39
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Region
Deck
Workplace accidents are costly and preventable
Request Number
e_sty_wps nw_jg
Long Teaser

Northwest leads Kaiser Permanente's hospital-based regions in the fewest workplace safety injuries in 2011.

Story body part 1

For the second year in a row, the Northwest region experienced the fewest workplace injuries of any hospital-based region in Kaiser Permanente. The Northwest ended the 2011 reporting year with a 15 percent improvement over injury rates in 2010. (The two California regions, Hawaii and the Northwest operate hospitals, while Colorado, Georgia, the Mid-Atlantic States and Ohio do not.)

Workplace Safety Committee co-leads Marilyn Terhaar and Susan McGovern Kinard attribute the region’s success to several factors:

  • Real-time information. Terhaar sends safety alert emails to managers, stewards, UBT co-leads and safety champions. The alerts list the injuries for the prior week and offer safety tips and resources.
  • Goals at the frontline. Keeping injury rates low is a regional goal and a PSP goal. Unit-based teams are encouraged to work on these workplace safety issues prior to tackling other goals.
  • Culture change. Safety conversations have become part of the workplace culture. If an employee sees someone not working safely or a hazard in the work area, she or he speaks up, knowing the problem will be addressed.
  • Investigation. The approach to safety is proactive. The Employee Health and Safety department investigates the root cause of an accident and tries to make sure the accident does not happen again.

High cost to both employees and KP

Employee injuries are significant in several ways. An injured employee may lose pay and time at work, and a department may have to work short, which may impact patient care. And there’s a financial impact on the organization—which eventually could affect member premiums.

 “The cost to open a workers’ compensation claim is about $1,200 on average,” says Terhaar. “Once you start adding in medical and surgical costs, the expenses can soar.”

Indemnity claims—those claims that cover employees with more serious injuries that require a longer time off—average $21,000.

 “That’s one of the reasons we have such a laser focus on safe patient handling. The risk to the employee for injury is so great,” explains McGovern Kinard.

Prevention

The Northwest region employs a well-constructed safe patient handling program. New employees are trained on safe patient handling, and more than 1,000 employees were retrained in 2011. Hospital and clinic policies require staff to move patients using safe handling techniques and equipment.

 “We have mobile lifts and overhead lifts at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center and will have the same equipment at our new hospital opening next year,” says Paulette Hawkins, RN, a workplace safety consultant. “In addition, all medical and dental clinics have mobile lifts and receive annual hands-on refresher training on request.”

Members of the workplace safety committee aren’t resting on their laurels. This year, they plan to bring the focus of safety to the UBT level.

“Most teams can solve their own issues,” say McGovern Kinard. “There’s been an increase in awareness that’s been growing steadily over the last five years. Our numbers say it all.”

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Jennifer Gladwell
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confirming scrubbed stats with clients. jg 3/8
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When Every Day Is Partnership Day

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Sun, 10/02/2016 - 13:55
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sty_Partnership Day wrap-up
Long Teaser

Wouldn't it be great if every organization and every union had a labor management partnership like ours? It could happen. The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Services hosted Partnership Day to explore the possibilities. 

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
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Non-LMP
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Robert Reich, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and former Secretary of Labor, made the economic case for worker engagement during his keynote address
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Gold Standard

In addition to Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions, the labor management partnerships presenting at the Partnership Day conference included:  

  • United Auto Workers (UAW) and Ford Motor Co.
  • International Paper Co. and United Steelworkers
  • SEIU Local 721 and Los Angeles County Health System
  • Berea City (Ohio) School District and the Ohio Federation of Teachers  
  • Energy Northwest Natural Gas and OPEIU Local 11

The following day, commenting on the success of the event, Alison Beck thanked KP for leading the way.

“They’re the gold standard of labor management partnerships,” she told attendees in her kickoff speech.

Check out more photos and insights from leaders of these organizations and unions on our Storify and on the FMCS Facebook page.

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When Every Day Is Partnership Day
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Organizations, unions from across the nation explore a more collaborative future
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What if every organization and every union had a labor management partnership like ours?

It’s not as far-fetched as it sounds. On Aug. 16, more than 250 union, business and government leaders from all over the United States gathered in Chicago for Partnership Day, a meeting hosted by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service at its biennial conference—and offered a realistic look at the ups and downs that occur in partnerships and what it takes to launch and sustain them.

“We know partnership can make a difference,” Allison Beck, FMCS director, told the gathering. “This is not some fantasy that happens in a make-believe world.” She should know. As leader of the FMCS, the federal agency that mediates labor disputes across the United States, she’s seen firsthand how acrimonious relationships can ruin companies and unions—and how more open and respectful ones can help them both succeed.

The partnership between Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions is the longest-lasting and strongest one in the nation, so conference participants asked many questions about how it operates.

A race to the top

Dennis Dabney, KP's senior vice president of National Labor Relations and Office of Labor Management Partnership, told the packed room he spends a lot of time on the phone with leaders from other companies interested in starting and strengthening partnerships.

“I've seen so many companies engaged in a race to the bottom,” Dabney said. “I'd like to see more engaged in a race to the top.” If he has any regrets about Kaiser Permanente’s partnership, he said, it's that we didn’t create unit-based teams sooner.

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