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SEIU 1021
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Disclosure

Major funding by the California Workers’ Justice Coalition sponsored by Service Employees International Union Local 1021.

Rebecca Kaplan, Alameda County Supervisor

Committee name and FPPC ID #:  California Workers’ Justice Coalition sponsored by Service Employees International Union Local 1021 (ID# 1433122)

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SEIU Chapter Officers

Current as of May 24, 2022

  • Karla Faucett – Chapter President
  • Daniel Schallock – Chapter Vice President
  • Roena Dumlao – Chapter Treasurers
  • Debra Durazo – Chapter Secretary
  • Cynthia Ross – Chapter Sergeant-at-Arms

 

 

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The City Wants to Gut Civil Service Rules

One of the cornerstones of our work is a fair, seniority-based process for promotion. This week, the City blamed their inability to hire people on the civil service rules that try to ensure fair treatment.

The City wants to rip up and throw away the rules that let our workers get ahead, and they have proposed:

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We’re going to fight like hell to save Laguna Honda Hospital

Recently, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), who provide the vast majority of our funding, have conducted site visits and an investigation into a number of on-site infractions. As a result, the hospital is required to implement a Closure and Patient Transfer and Relocation Plan while we all continue to work towards recertification.

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SEIU 1021 members at John George Psychiatric Hospital say: “NOT ONE MORE ASSAULT”

John George Psychiatric Hospital is Alameda County’s only emergency mental health care facility, where patients experiencing mental health issues can be treated. Unfortunately, understaffing and mismanagement have put John George in a crisis situation, in which nearly 250 assaults have taken place recently, with patients and workers alike the victims of violence.

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The County Says We’re Not a Priority
It's Time to Change That

Our Union Coalition Bargaining Team, representing 9 Unions and 6000 + County employees, met with the County management team the morning of Friday May 13th. The County’s negotiators continue to keep an outrageous proposal on the table, a “poison pill” proposal that will take money away from our general wage increases if we bargain over anything economic at our local union bargaining table. The County only moved 1% in wage increases in the last year of the contract from 3% to 4%. They did offer a one-time $2,000.00 pandemic relief payment, but it was unclear who would receive it.