About 1,800 health care workers at four Prime Healthcare facilities in Southern California are set to go on a seven-day strike over the Christmas holiday starting Wednesday.
The upcoming strike is the second recent work stoppage at Prime Healthcare facilities in the region. The first took place in October when the same group of workers, represented by SEIU United Healthcare Workers West, went on a five-day strike.
The facilities targeted this time are Prime St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood; Prime Centinela Medical Center in Inglewood; Prime Garden Grove Hospital Medical Center and Prime Encino Medical Center.
Picket lines will run daily from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday through Friday. Although there will be no lines after Friday, the strike extends through the holiday with workers returning on Dec. 27, according to SEIU.
According to a statement from Prime Healthcare, the Ontario, California-based company is continuing to negotiate with SEIU.
“Proposals have been delivered to the union from the hospital that would increase wages and provide a valuable health care plan, maintain important benefits, and be competitive with other hospitals in the market,” the company said. “It is disappointing that despite progress being made, the union has walked away from negotiations and has chosen to strike, but that will not impact our commitment to providing quality patient care to our communities throughout the holidays and always.”
The union says workers are taking the action “after months of trying to address the facilities’ long-standing issues of understaffing, worker turnover, and patient care concerns at the bargaining table.”
SEIU says its efforts have been met by bad faith bargaining and other unfair labor practices.
“For months, Prime management has been intimidating and attempting to silence health care workers for raising concerns about patient care and short staffing at their hospitals,” Dolores Aguilar, a unit secretary at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, said in a statement.
“We are exhausted and overwhelmed and are struggling to provide quality care,” she said. “We are going on strike again because Prime executives are bargaining in bad faith and are refusing to listen to us about worker and patient safety.”
Aguilar is one of four frontline health care workers suspended from the medical center just days after participating in a protest over staffing and patient care conditions at Prime Healthcare’s headquarters in Ontario, according to SEIU.
Frontline health care workers participating in the strike include emergency room technicians, licensed vocational nurses, certified nursing assistants, radiology technicians medical assistants, respiratory technicians and many others, the union said.
Prime Healthcare said the hospitals will remain open during the strike.
