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Picketers gather at the Kaiser Permanente Fresno Medical Center October 2023. Photo by Ben Hensley

published on October 3, 2025 - 2:30 PM
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The United Nurses Association of California/Union of Health Care Professionals (UNAC/UHCP) announced Friday that they have delivered a strike notice to Kaiser Permanente executives, setting the start of the strike for Tuesday, Oct. 14.

The announcement of the strike falls within the ten-day window that health care unions must provide employers prior to a strike.

The strike will be the largest UNAC/UHCP strike against Kaiser Permanente, with tens of thousands of frontline registered nurses and health professionals holding strikes at over two dozen hospitals in California and Hawaii. Members of the Alliance of Health Care Unions will join pickets in California, Hawaii and Oregon.

More than 31,000 union health care professionals at Kaiser are represented by UNAC/UHCP. The organization is part of the Alliance of Health Care Unions, which bargains national contracts for 23 local unions expanding across dozens of hospitals and clinics across the country.

The Alliance of Health Care Unions includes 62,000 Kaiser employees nationwide; 46,000 employees saw their contracts expire on Sept. 30 or Oct 1, with nearly all local unions providing Kaiser with 10-day strike notices.

Employees say Kaiser’s stagnant wages and unsafe staffing threaten both the workforce and the care patients receive at Kaiser facilities.

Kaiser holds $64 billion in reserves, with a Friday news release stating that much of those funds were accumulated during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Our members built Kaiser into the respected institution it is today,” said UNAC/UHCP lead negotiator and executive director Joe Guzynski. “If Kaiser refuses to invest in them now, it isn’t just neglecting its workforce — it’s putting the entire health care system at risk.”

Employees are citing safe staffing issues, calling on Kaiser to honor contractual ratios and staffing solutions “based on reality,” adding that caregivers demand schedules focused on patient need as opposed to corporate goals. Employees also call for fair pay and economic security, as well as retirement security.

“This strike is about protecting patients as much as it is about protecting caregivers,” said UNAC/UHCP President Charmaine S. Morales, RN. “Kaiser executives cannot keep expanding while ignoring the crisis inside their hospitals. Our message is clear: invest in the people who provide care, or face the consequences of a workforce that refuses to stay silent.”


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