Community Corner
12,000 Santa Clara County Workers May Strike This Week
About 12,000 nurses, janitors, road workers and 9-1-1 dispatchers may strike this week unless the county Board of Supervisors intervenes.

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, CA — Some 12,000 9-1-1 dispatchers, social workers, health and hospital workers, nurses, park workers, janitors, clerks and roads and maintenance workers -- among others -- represented by Service Employees International Union Local 521 plan to go on strike Friday unless the Santa Clara Board of Supervisors intervenes, the union said in a statement Sunday.
"The county is proposing eliminating the wage increase for June 2020 that they included in their 'last, best and final' offer of 2019," said Janet Diaz, a patient services clerk at Valley Medical Center, in Sunday's statement. "This is not only illegal, but a deliberate attack on the livelihoods of workers who not only serve the public, but who are residents of this county.
"The Board of Supervisors must intervene to avoid a countywide strike set for this week," Diaz said.
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The supervisors are set to meet Monday, at 2 p.m. for open session and public comment, with closed session to follow.
This newest strike announcement comes nine months after the last contract covering "frontline" employees - those who routinely work directly with the public - expired July 17. The possible strike Friday would come after a 10-day strike in October, which was followed by voluntary mediation in November. In August, 97 percent of Local 521's members voted to authorize October's unfair labor practices strike; that vote also serves as authorization for this Friday's strike, if it happens, a union spokesman said Sunday night
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Key issues, Local 521 leaders said, are short staffing and turnover resulting from low pay.
Until recently, it appeared that agreement was close but now the county is "moving backwards" by insisting on a new offer with roughly $110 million less in raises than what had been offered by the county in its contract offer of Oct. 15. "By eliminating a previously-offered raise of 3 percent in June 2020, the new proposal would cause the essential frontline workers -- already low paid - to fall even further behind others employed by the county," Sunday's release said.
Calls to Santa Clara County public information office were not immediately returned Sunday night.
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