April 18, 2026

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Tens of thousands of Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers to vote for strike

Tens of thousands of Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers to vote for strike

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Kaiser nurses [Photo: OFNHP Facebook]

Around 32,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers, including registered nurses, pharmacists, physical/occupational therapists and optometrists, are voting this week to authorize strike action once their contract expires on September 30. The workers in California and Hawaii, members of the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals (UNAC/UHCP), are under a wider contract involving over 60,000 people in the Alliance of Health Care Unions.

The vote comes a week after 600 midwives and anesthetists conducted a one-day strike at Kaiser facilities in Northern California. The strike involved workers from over 20 facilities, although picketing was held only at the Oakland and Roseville locations.

The strikers were joined by a roughly equal number of “sympathy strikers,” including physician assistants (PAs) and acupuncturists. While they are members of the UNAC/UHCP, they are governed by a separate bargaining framework. They voted to join in 2023-2024 and are still working without a contract.

Handmade pickets at the Oakland facility last Monday accused KP of “Bad-faith bargaining” and declared, “Stop profits over babies and families!”; “Safe staffing for patients and providers!”; and “Expert care under attack!”

WSWS reporters spoke with workers at KP in Oakland on Friday. “I think all the workers should come together and do a physical, all-union strike,” one worker said. “I don’t think it’s enough communication from union officials because I didn’t even know they were going to be striking the other day. I didn’t even know until I came to work.”

“We have no information,” he said. “Information needs to be spread for every union … That’s simple. The transporters, the receivers, all the people that you don’t really know about, they need to be heard. It’s one of the most important jobs people don’t ever hear about it. It’s always about the doctors and the nurses, and maybe the pharmacists, but it’s the little people that make this thing run.”

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