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Superior Court of Butte County

SEIU 1021 staff and member leaders are working hard to safeguard your health at work during the COVID-19 pandemicClick here to find employer-specific information, details, and documents to learn more about what’s happening in your worksite during this outbreak.

Download the Superior Court of Butte County – Personnel Manual – Oct 01, 2015

Download the Superior Court of Butte County Memorandum of Understanding for the Professional Unit (2020 – 2021)

Download the Superior Court of Butte County Memorandum of Understanding for the General Unit (2020 – 2021)

Download the Superior Court of Butte County Chapter Bylaws

Article

Member Spotlight: Meet the Superior Court of Sonoma County Stewards Council and Bargaining Team

A union is only as strong as its members. Thanks to these four awesome member leaders, the SEIU 1021 Superior Court of Sonoma County chapter is showing up to contract negotiations stronger than ever.

Two new additions to the team are Blanca Santillan Castro and Ashley Olazar. They joined the team a couple of months ago and have already completed their first shop steward training. Their new energy and thirst for knowledge will be vital during this year’s critical contract negotiations. 

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Solano Courts workers vote overwhelmingly to ratify a new contract

Superior Court of Solano County workers have voted to ratify their most recent agreement, after securing a number of significant victories for members at the Court.

Included in the new contract are a 6% raise after ratification, followed by a 3% raise in November of 2022. Members also won vacation cash out language, new pay differentials for court reporters that could go as high as 10% depending on the workers’ certification status, and more. 

Solano Court worker Dreighton Palacios had this to say:

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“There’s Nowhere to Live Here”
SEIU 1021 Mendocino County chapters release report addressing Mendocino County’s housing crisis causes, offering recommendations

Dec. 20, 2021: “I can think of a half a dozen employees that the County has offered jobs to here on the coast, but they had to turn down the offer, because they couldn’t find anywhere to live,” reported one Mendocino County employee in a survey. “The average apartment rents for about $1200 to $1300 per month. The rental agency requires your income to be three times the rent. I make around $35 per hour, and I can’t even afford that. How is someone who makes minimum wage or is a single parent supposed to find a place to live?” laments another survey respondent.