Search: Alameda County
Results
Alameda County – General Chapter
Check out the latest news for General Chapter members
Download a copy of the Alameda County General Unit Chapter Bylaws
Download the Alameda County Memorandum of Understanding (2022 - 2026)
Alameda County BHCS Notice of Elections
(Updated Dec. 27, 2023 with corrected meeting date.)
Per SEIU Local 1021 Alameda County Behavioral Health Care Chapter Bylaws, notice is hereby given of Chapter Officer Elections for the ALCO Behavioral Health Care Chapter for the purpose of electing new Chapter Executive Board Members to be completed by February 13, 2024. The Chapter Election Committee members for the election are: Jonah Hall, Deborah Perry.
Nominations for the Officer seats listed below will open on December 27, 2023 and will be accepted until January 27, 2024.
Alameda County
SEIU 1021 staff and member leaders are working hard to safeguard your health at work during the COVID-19 pandemic. Click here to find employer-specific information, details, and documents to learn more about what’s happening in your worksite during this outbreak.
SEIU 1021 SSA ELECTION SCHEDULE AND NOMINEES
UPDATED 9/27/2023
NOMINEES
Only one position is contested and will be voted on:
Vice President Unit 5:
- Carlotta R. Bell
- Cynthia Landry
Cynthia Landry’s candidate statement is attached. Carlotta Bell did not provide a candidate statement.
All other officer positions had only one nominee, and are considered elected by acclimation. Those officers are:
Letter to Alameda County General Chapter Membership
Dear members of SEIU Local 1021 Alameda County General Chapter:
Click Here for Info About the Next Alameda County General Chapter Meeting
Alameda County General Chapter
Meets every 2nd Thursday
via Zoom
Meeting ID # 837 665 96575
Alameda County members win a new contract after long fight
On Wednesday, April 26, Alameda County workers made it official and voted to ratify their new contract, with 95% YES votes. This followed a lengthy bargaining campaign that started in July of 2022 with the election of a bargaining team and featured near-constant countywide actions, from rallies and marches and unity breaks to petitions, packing the Board of Supervisors meetings to make public comment, and spreading their message with billboards and bus ads.