A massive strike by 31,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers in California and Hawaii this January cost the nonprofit health giant an additional $1 billion to keep its facilities running with temporary staff, according to a company spokesperson. The walkout, led by the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals, stemmed from a $1 billion gap in wage negotiations.
Kaiser ultimately spent heavily on replacement workers at hospitals and clinics rather than meeting union demands for 25% raises over four years. Union leaders eventually called off the strike and accepted Kaiser's final offer: improved staffing and 21.5% raises over four years.
Labor experts say the hardball strategy came with a steep hidden cost: frayed trust between California's largest private employer and its workforce, a partnership once hailed as a national model for labor relations. "That's the real cost," said John August, former executive director of the coalition of Kaiser labor unions from 2006 to 2013.
"The cost of having a breakdown in trust, in one of the most important health care systems in the country." John Logan, a labor expert at San Francisco State University, noted that Kaiser knew the strike would be expensive but was prepared to pay the price.
The open-ended strike began on January 10 and officially ended four weeks later, though Kaiser claimed nearly half of striking workers returned to their jobs before the official end. The alliance of unions ratified new contracts in March, ending months of bargaining and work stoppages.
Kaiser spokesperson Antonia Ehlers said the strike "disrupted care and service for our members and came at a significant cost at a time when keeping care affordable is more important than ever." During the strike, Kaiser argued the unions' $3 billion pay proposal would force premium increases, while its own $2 billion proposal would not. Ehlers did not directly answer whether members could expect premium hikes in 2027 due to the strike's cost.
Kaiser, a closed network of doctors, hospitals, and clinics, kept facilities open by onboarding temporary workers. Patients were notified if appointments had to be postponed.
UNAC/UHCP Executive Director Joe Guzynski called the cost "staggering" and questioned why Kaiser didn't invest more in workforce stability before the dispute escalated. The acrimonious strike has independent experts questioning the health of Kaiser's decades-old labor-management partnership, which had previously prevented strikes.
The relationship has been tested before, notably in 2018 when tensions split the labor coalition into two factions. The SEIU-led faction won 21% raises in 2023 and a state law raising the minimum wage for healthcare workers to $25 an hour.
August said the rival group's success inspired the nurses and other professionals to launch their open-ended strike this winter, "trying to do better than that." He added that management drew a hard line and dug in. Adding to tension, Kaiser has expanded into Pennsylvania and Nevada and reported financially flush years, with a $9.3 billion net income in 2025 and $12.9 billion in 2024.
The nonprofit, which does not pay taxes on profits, put $27 billion into reserves over four years, totaling $67 billion in savings and investments, according to the Center for Media and Democracy. Kaiser executives say the reserves protect its stability, but labor leaders argue the company has amassed wealth while rejecting serious investment in its workforce, putting "profits over patients."
Since the contracts were ratified, both labor and Kaiser executives have signaled interest in rebuilding trust. "Since the strike, the parties have worked alongside Kaiser to strengthen our relationship and build a more collaborative foundation for the future," Guzynski said.
However, Kaiser faces fresh challenges with other worker groups. About 2,400 Kaiser therapists in Northern California held a one-day strike in March over concerns that managers were replacing workers with artificial intelligence tools.