Tens of thousands of Kaiser Permanente nurses are threatening to walk off the job despite a proposed 21% wage increase offered by the California healthcare giant.
The strike, set to begin at 7 a.m. Monday, would take vital hospital workers off hospital floors in the Golden State and Hawaii until a contract agreement with their union is reached, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Members of the United Nurses Association of California/Union of Health Care Professionals include registered nurses, nurse anesthetists, midwives, rehab therapists, physician assistants, pharmacists and other specialties.
The strike is set to begin at 7 a.m. Monday. MediaNews Group via Getty ImagesUnion members say the strike is centered around Kaiser’s failure to invest in safe and adequate staffing levels, timely access to quality care and fair wages for caregivers, according to the Times.
In an effort to prevent the walkouts, Kaiser proposed a 21.5% wage increase, but the the union said the company refused to bargain in good faith.
“Our focus remains on reaching agreements that recognize the vital contributions of our employees while ensuring excellent, affordable care,” Kaiser management said in a statement to the Times.
“We have proposed 21.5% wage increases — our strongest national bargaining offer ever — and we are prepared to close agreements at local tables now. Employees deserve their raises and patients deserve our full attention, not prolonged disputes.”
The strikes are set to take place outside of Kaiser hospitals and clinics across California and Hawaii. MediaNews Group via Getty ImagesThe healthcare workers went on strike in October 2025 while asking for a 25% increase in wages, saying their pay was at least 7% below colleagues at other companies.
At the time Kaiser offered the 21.5% increase, arguing that its healthcare workers made 16% more than their peers and that the company would need to charge patients more to accommodate the increases.
UNAC/UHCP President Charmaine S. Morales said the nurses are “not going on strike to make noise.”
“We’re striking because Kaiser has committed serious unfair labor practices and because Kaiser refuses to bargain in good faith over staffing that protects patients, workload standards that stop moral injury and the respect and dignity that Kaiser caregivers have been denied for far too long,” she told the Times.
The union has filed an unfair labor practice with the National Labor Relations Board amid allegations that they walked away from the bargaining table and didn’t adhere to national bargaining practices.
Negotiations appeared to stall at the end of 2025, in a process that lasted about eight months, the Times reported.
Kaiser Permanente operates as one of the largest not-for-profit health care companies in the nation, covering 12.6 million members.
The strikes are scheduled to take place outside Kaiser hospitals and clinics across California and Hawaii.
With Post wire services.
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