Health-care professionals unite for rights

Tuesday, September 30, 1997

Health-care professionals unite for rights

UNION: Members now have the power to alter employment
policies

By Kathryn Combs

Daily Bruin Contributor

Earlier this month in possibly one of the largest union
elections in California, 2,000 health care professionals employed
by the University of California voted to join the University
Professional and Technical Employees (UPTE).

This decision to join UPTE is the first integral step for health
care professionals toward having a voice in the development of
employment policy.

"Now, the university cannot impose changes on the terms of
present employment for UC employees without negotiating with the
union first," said Eddie Acosta, an UPTE organizer at UCLA.

UCLA’s health care professionals, including clinical social
workers, therapists and pharmacists, voted nearly 2 to 1 for
unionization.

"The health care industry is changing daily, and health care
workers need to have some voice in those changes," Acosta said.

Officials are unsure of the effect this will have on the
relationships between Medical Center management and employees.

"(The vote) is neither an advantage or a disadvantage," said
Maure Gardner, manager of compensation and labor relations for the
Human Resources division of the UCLA Medical Center.

"It’s a responsible choice by those who voted (and) I don’t
think that it’s different or unusual than our relationships with
other unions," Gardner said.

"There were a lot of elements and events over the years that
contributed to the way people voted," Gardner added.

UC employees have aired complaints ranging from heavy caseloads
to layoffs and the restructuring of departments without employee
input, UPTE officials said.

"When the university makes up its own rules, they generally make
up personnel policies that cut costs. These tend to be bad for
employees and bad for the patients that they take care of," said
Libby Sayre, executive vice president of UPTE.

Organizers see this vote as an assertion of employee rights.

"We want to participate in the changes that are occuring in the
workplace rather than just waiting for the next bomb to drop," said
employee Lourdes Inchauspi.

Inchauspi, a clinical lab technician from the department of
pathology and laboratory medicine, experienced firsthand the major
restructuring last winter which led UPTE to file an Unfair Labor
Practice Charge with the Public Employment Relations Board
(PERB).

According to Eddie Acosta, everyone in this department was laid
off, but not everyone was hired back.

Some say that layoffs are only one reason for strengthening
their union.

"The UC’s attempts to privatize three of the five medical
centers were a motivating factor, as were cuts in staffing levels,
layoffs and a decline in the quality of patient care," said Jalger
Kalmijn, president of UPTE, in a statement earlier this month.

UPTE organizers see this vote as an assertion of employee
rights.

Beginning in October, UPTE will survey new union members, hold
elections, and then begin contract negotiation.

"One of the things about a union contract is that it is
enforceable," said Sayre. "The problems with UC policies is that
they are not fully enforceable. Now UC employees can enforce them
through the grievance and arbitration process," Sayre said.

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