The nationwide U.S. strike wave that has seen hundreds of thousands of autoworkers, screenwriters, actors, hotel workers, baristas, and others walk off the job to win better wages and benefits could soon get even bigger, as tens of thousands of flight attendants and Kaiser Permanente employees prepare to take action amid stalled contract talks.
“We are not alone,” the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA), which represents more than 26,000 American Airlines flight attendants, told its members in anĀ updateĀ on contract negotiations earlier this week. “Our struggle is part of a larger struggle by working people standing up against corporate greed. Autoworkers are on strike against the Big Three, as are actors and screenwriters.”
Late last month, APFA membersĀ voted overwhelminglyĀ to authorize a strike if management stands by a contract proposal that the unionĀ criticizedĀ as inadequate.
More than 6,500 Alaska Airlines flight attendants represented by the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA are alsoĀ threatening walkoutsĀ as they push forĀ substantial wage increases. The flight attendants have been working under the same contract since 2014.
Flight attendants withĀ SouthwestĀ andĀ United AirlinesĀ are also fighting for new contracts.
Meanwhile, the largest healthcare strike in U.S. history is looming as 85,000 Kaiser Permanente employees represented by the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions demand a new contract that addresses understaffing and insufficient pay. Their current contract expires on September 30.
In recent weeks, Kaiser Permanente workers in Colorado, Oregon, California, and the Washington, D.C. area haveĀ voted to authorize strikes.
“We will take action if Kaiser Permanente does not come to the bargaining table to properly address our prioritiesāincluding staffing, patient care, and a consistent national wage increase to reward and retain our healthcare workers,” the Office and Professional Employees International Union Local 2 said in aĀ statementĀ earlier this week after 98% of its members voted to authorize a strike.
Caroline Lucas, the executive director of the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions,Ā toldThe Washington PostĀ that “we hope that there will be no work stoppage, that there will be no need to strike, and that we’ll reach a resolution this week.”
“But our workers are so burned out and so pushed to the brink that theyāre ready to walk off for up to two weeks if that’s what it takes to get a respectful contract,” Lucas added.
Management of Kaiser PermanenteāwhichĀ reportedĀ roughly $3.3 billion in net income during the first half of 2023āand union negotiators are currently holding a two-day national bargaining session.
More than 50,000 Las Vegas hotel workers could also soon be joining the wave of labor action, with the Culinary and Bartenders UnionsĀ set to hold a strike authorization voteĀ on September 26.
“The current wave of strikes isn’t bad for America. It’s good for America.”
More than 350,000 workers haveĀ gone on strike across the U.S.Ā this year in pursuit of higher wages, improved benefits, and better working conditions that reflect the surging profits of their employers. Recent data from the U.S. Labor Department showed thatĀ 4.1 million days of workĀ were lost nationwide last month due to strikesāthe highest monthly total in more than two decades.
Last week, nearly 13,000 autoworkers walked out at three General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis facilities as the profitable companies refused to meet the United Auto Workers’ demands, whichĀ includeĀ a 36% wage increase, anĀ end to tiered compensation structures, and improved pension and healthcare benefits.
On Friday, the UAW isĀ expected to announce strikes at additional locationsĀ as it ramps up pressure on the automakers, and the union’s president has stressed that an all-out strike involving around 150,000 autoworkers remains an option.
With the UAW strike just beginning, it appears as if the monthslong writer and actor strike could be moving toward a conclusion.
CNBCreportedĀ that writers represented by the Writers Guild of America and Hollywood producers are “near an agreement” following a bargaining session on Wednesday.
“If a deal is not reached,” the outlet noted, “the strike could last through the end of the year.”
In a column forĀ The GuardianĀ earlier this week, former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich argued that “the current wave of strikes isn’t bad for America. It’s good for America.”
“American workers still have little to no countervailing power relative to large American corporations. Unionized workers now comprise only 6% of the private-sector workforceādown from over a third in the 1960s,” Reich wrote. “Which is why the activism of the UAW, the Writers Guild, SAG-AFTRA, the Teamsters, flight attendants, Amazon warehouse workers, and Starbucks workers is so important.”
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