SEIU United Healthcare Workers West
Full name | SEIU United Healthcare Workers West |
---|---|
Founded | 2004 |
Members | 147,391 (2013)[1] |
Head union | Service Employees International Union |
Key people |
|
Office location | Oakland, California |
Country | United States |
Website |
www |
The SEIU United Healthcare Workers West (SEIU UHW) is a statewide local union of the Service Employees International Union in California in the United States. It has a membership of nearly 150,000.
UHW is headquartered in Oakland, California and has offices statewide. UHW is an industrial union representing all classifications of health care workers in hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, home health agencies as well as homecare workers. UHW is one of the fastest growing unions in the nation and is very diverse, with its members speaking more than 50 languages.
History
UHW was created by the merger of two SEIU local unions: Local 250 in Northern California and Local 399 in Southern California. The larger of those two locals, Local 250, began when workers at San Francisco General Hospital, who were inspired by the 1934 general strike in San Francisco, organized a union at their hospital in 1934 as the Hospital and Institutional Workers Union #19818, later affiliating with the Building Service Employees International Union, becoming BSEIU Local 250. After affiliation, they won a groundbreaking first contract with the San Francisco Hospital Conference, covering 11 hospitals. BSEIU Local 399 emerged in 1949, when several Southern California local unions consolidated under the leadership of BSEIU’s Charles “Pop” Hardy who had a vision of joining small unions together to build strength. It then successfully negotiated a contract with the first Kaiser Permanente hospital, in Los Angeles, the following year.
In 1958, both BSEIU Local 250 and Local 399 joined together in leading the BSEIU effort to defeat Prop. 18, a right-to-work initiative. After BSEIU changed its name to SEIU in 1968, the two locals partnered again in 1974 to successfully lobby Congress to change federal law, allowing non-profit hospitals to organize. The two merged to form SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West (SEIU Local 2005) in 2004.
On January 27, 2009, SEIU placed UHW West under trusteeship and dismissed 70 of the local's executives, including president Sal Rosselli.[3][4] Rosselli and other ousted leaders reformed under the National Union of Healthcare Workers and pushed for UHW West members at 60 facilities to vote to decertify SEIU.[5] In the series of elections that have taken place so far to determine whether or not current SEIU-UHW members want to stay in their union or join rival NUHW, more than 73,000 have chosen to stay in the local. [6]
On June 23, 2010 SEIU-UHW members at Kaiser Permanente ratified a contract covering 46,000 California workers guaranteeing a 3% annual wage increases.[7] Other recent victories of the union include winning a six-week strike against Sutter Health in San Francisco; the conclusion of successful negotiations with Catholic Healthcare West; organizing victories at O'Connor Woods Retirement Community in Stockton, California (later decertified two years later which was a stunning defeat for SEIU-UHW), St. Vincent Medical Center in Los Angeles, Parkview Community Hospital in Riverside, California, and of IT workers at Kaiser; and a statewide contract victory with HCA, the nation's largest hospital company. Most of the union's current organizing work is being carried out in Southern California.
References
- ↑ US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 543-099. Report submitted March 31, 2014.
- 1 2 US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 543-099. (Search)
- ↑ "SEIU Takes Over West Coast Union", San Francisco Chronicle (January 28, 2009)
- ↑ Steven T. Jones, "Union Showdown", San Francisco Bay Guardian (January 28, 2009)
- ↑ George Raine, "Ousted SEIU Leaders Push Decertification Vote", San Francisco Chronicle (February 3, 2009)
- ↑ "Workers in Four Healthcare Facilities Choose to Stay in SEIU-UHW, Reject Rival Union", BusinessWire (July 30, 2010)
- ↑ "Kaiser workers OK two-year labor contract", Kathy Robertson, Sacramento Business Journal (June 25, 2010)
External links
- Official website
- "The Battle for Labor's Soul" by Clint Reilly
- "A Leader, His Critics, and a Union Divided", The Washington Post (May 26, 2008)
- Jesse Powell, "A Less Perfect Union", San Francisco Bay Guardian (April 9, 2008)
- Kris Maher, "Union Resists SEIU Effort to Centralize Control", The Wall Street Journal (January 22, 2009)
- Steven T. Jones, "Fallout From Union Clash", San Francisco Bay Guardian (February 4, 2009)