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Workshop Talks
March 2001


Divide and conquer

by Htun Lin

All Kaiser hospital workers, including myself, just attended an all day orientation promoting the labor-management partnership to front-line health care workers. The precondition for this is that Kaiser remain a financially successful organization, which has meant drastic staff reductions and patient care cutbacks over the last five years.

All day long they emphasized the importance of all union workers joining forces with management in this partnership to help them compete against the for-profit sharks in the market place. In other words, nothing in the partnership challenges the logic of finance capital's restructuring of health care over the last decade-nothing addresses the daily stress over cutbacks in available beds, lack of adequately trained nurses, and lack of supplies and equipment.

It was ironic that they showed a labor history video about the fight against Taylorism. Workers fought Taylorism's job redesign, speed-up as well as de-skilling of jobs, job fragmentation and time study. That is the primary concern of rank-and-file workers under this partnership, which accelerated de-skilling, speed-up and fragmenting nursing. The new functions, however, create new union positions for a cooperative union.

'PARTNERSHIP' RESCUES BUREAUCRATS

Our orientation was full of the rhetoric that "quality care" is the main goal of the partnership. We workers remember that Kaiser CEO David Lawrence initially ignored AFL-CIO President John Sweeney's offer of "strategic partnership." Then right in the midst of the successful 1997-98 strikes by the California Nurses Association (CNA) over quality care, Lawrence found an escape hatch in Sweeney's offer and they jointly announced the new "strategic partnership" in December 1997.

Part of the partnership agreement is that the AFL-CIO can organize any new employees as Kaiser expands. The biggest AFL-CIO union here, SEIU Local 250, has been on an aggressive organizing campaign taking the mantle of "quality care." However this has not been on the basis of solidarity with nurses but rather as an adversary. Their special treatment in organizing is payoff for their partnership which was designed to undermine cross-union rank-and-file solidarity.

Sweeney seems to have discovered a new language of internationalism in an attempt to co-opt and at the same time undermine the independent rank-and-file anti-globalization movement. He spoke in Davos, Switzerland, saying "trade is an economic tool to meet the ends of development, democracy and a better deal for working people and their families around the globe."

When has trade ever been an "economic tool" to meet the needs of human development, democracy, and a better deal for working people? How can even capitalists with good intentions achieve these goals (much less labor bureaucrats) when the primary goal of global trade is to serve the self-expansion of capital? Marx answered this question indirectly when he exclaimed that in place of all the inalienable freedoms, the bourgeoisie substitutes a single freedom: free trade.

NURSES UNION UNINVITED

Many service workers asked about the glaring absence of registered nurses at the orientation. Many of us service workers had joined the nurses on their picket line because they led the way in raising quality care as a central contract issue. They won despite management's all out effort to fight them-a fight which included initiating a partnership with leaders of other unions. Today's partnership wants us to forget the real source of quality care as a worker's issue.

When the partnership was announced, SEIU refused to officially honor the nurses' picket lines. Now we see a glaring lack of CNA support at our service worker pickets against Sutter Health Care. CNA removed from their own contract a clause which allowed CNA members to honor picket lines of striking workers in other unions. CNA leadership put in writing what Local 250 did in practice when the partnership was announced, in other words, selling out other workers who happen to be in other unions.

A CNA nurse said this unilateral action passed after an abruptly called meeting where discussion was prematurely cut off. She said this was reminiscent of the dictatorial tactics used by the American Nurses Association which the present leadership ousted years ago when they created CNA as an autonomous and much more democratic union.

What is important to us workers is not petty disputes between union leaders. What is important is the shared experience we have in struggling against this restructuring in our everyday working lives and finding a solution from that perspective.




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