Open Letter to UDW Members Regarding your Union Dues

 

By Kristine Loomis,
IHSS Client, Riverside County

As a client of IHSS I am really concerned about my home care worker getting exhausted or sick. When your very life depends on someone else’s care, you want them to be healthy and to have good enough circumstances so that they will be able to continue doing the work they do.

That is why I am writing to all of you – other providers – personally. I know there are many of you who are so busy surviving, that you don’t have time to get involved in anything else. But I was actually looking for some way I could help my home care worker to endure the stresses of the job, so we both joined the UDW bargaining committee. I was there while we bargained with the county for almost a year to get our very first contract in this county. That contract included raises and healthcare benefits for workers in Riverside. I know for a fact we would never have gotten the raises and healthcare coverage without the union – because the county fought us every step of the way. But in the end they agreed to raise wages, and introduce first time medical coverage. Prior to union representation homecare providers made $7.11 per hour. Due to continued union representation we are now at $10.25 and if the governor had not cut state funding our wages would have been higher under the present contract.

Before we got raises and benefits, I was literally scared my care provider was going to collapse under the load. Now I know he can visit a doctor if he needs to. And the raise has made it possible to occasionally get him time off for a couple of hours by hiring a second provider come in and provide respite – which all providers know is absolutely crucial when you’re on call 24/7. These union improvements have made a life and death difference for my provider and me.

Some of you may wonder if the union is just another organization that wants a piece of your life. Some of you may have lower wages than we do. My county (Riverside) was among one of the first to get representation, so I want to let you know that it worked, and that it is worth much more to us than what we pay in dues. Now, each time we neotiate a contract it builds on the last one and our situation improves. As a solitary voice I can write all the letters I want to the politicians, try to protest my hours getting cut, or ask for a raise for my provider. But it isn’t the same – a solitary voice can (and does!) get ignored. When we are represented by UDW, the policy-makers listen to us because they know that the union represents thousandsof people who vote – and that is who pays their salary – the voters, and taxpayers.

I wanted you to hear this from someone who lives with the same struggles you do – day by day survival – and has been fortunate enough to witness first hand, what happens when we get representation. Our lives get better. This union is worth supporting.

I sincerely thank you for your time and your consideration in reading this. I know how valuable and scarce time is for care providers – how little of it you get for yourselves – and how hard you work. Thank you on behalf of all clients.

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  • jeff phillips

    Kristene your comments are exactly right – I have been a provider for the last 8 yaers here in Orange County and if not for the Union I would simply not ahve been able to continue working for 11 censt over minimum wage and no medical – thank you for your kind remarks and rest assured speaking for myself – I support UDWA completely.

  • http://www.udwa.org Kristine

    Hi Jeff – thanks for your response. We are in for a tough year to keep IHSS funded and alive — we need our union more than ever, as well as the advocacy organizations that are helping to bring these terrible cuts to the court system.

  • jill

    I have two comments/questions to submit: Is there anyone who can explain how the State can charge a SOC in the amount of $613 EVERY MONTH to a recipient (client) who has a gross monthly income of $1231? Second question: is there any support for the provider (caregiver) of a client that has 24/7 Protective Supervision (meaning that someone has to be with that person around the clock)? How does the State have the right to impose such restrictions upon a caregiver without any remedy or suggestions other than to have a backup caregiver that is to be paid by the client or provider. In that case, would those wages then be applied toward the Share of Cost?

  • jill

    Are the member benefits still applicable pertaining to the UDWA affiliation with AFSCME? There was a link (that I cannot seem to find) to their site listing those benefits (i.e., credit union). I would appreciate that information, if available.

  • http://www.udwa.org Kristine

    Jill –

    Yes, the AFSCME membership benefits apply for UDW members. Here is the direct link: http://www.afscme.org/members/membersindex.cfm
    Thanks for your patience, we are working on getting all the information in to the new site.

  • http://www.udwa.org Kristine

    Jill,

    You can get a document from Disability Rights California about Share of Cost rules; they have publications on IHSS free at their website, here: http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/Issues/inhome_pubs.html or you can call 1-800-776-5746 and ask them to mail you one on Share of Cost for a small fee. You can also call the UDW Member Communications Center to see if they can help; toll free at 1-800-621-5016 (ask for the “MCC.”)

    Unfortunately the IHSS program is not able to provide 24/7 support for clients. I know from personal experience how hard it is for providers in this situation. In some areas there is Adult Day-Care available. You might try contacting your local IHSS Public Authority and asking them if there is such a service available in your county.

    I hope this information is of some help.

  • MARIA

    i have been a provider since 1990 n yes it is has a big difference with the union,when i started care of my grandmother(now deceased)no one was there for the provider,but the union alone can’t do it alone,just they are here to help us,we need to stand up and fight the battle right along side with the union. i am still a provider for my mother,who is wheelchair bound and is using adult diapers, yes our job is hard but as i asked my former neighbor john benoint to come spend the day and work it while raising 2 children, by the time i knew it he had moved. well come to show u that they are scared to try to do our job,even ole arnold should b ashamed of himself, afterall his mother in law was one great woman who cared about the child n elderly n disabled. may she rest in peace. thank you for the great job UDW

  • maria salas

    EVERY TIME I LOOK I SEE THEY WANT TO CUT THE SENIORS WHO REALLY NEED THE HELP AND OTHER THINGS THE I NEVER SEE SAN DIEGO MAKING MORE $9.50 WHEN OTHER MAKE 11.00 OR 12.00 WHY IS THAT I KNOW THE UNION IS DOING A GOOD JOB BUT WE NEED MORE THANK YOU
    MARIA SLAS

  • http://www.udwa.org Steve Mehlman

    Thanks, Maria. Appreciate your statement that UDW is doing a good job.

    The fact that the salary rate in San Diego County is $9.50 an hour in San Diego and $11 or $12 elsewhere has more to do with the County Boards of Supervisors than with union efforts to get salary and benefit increases for our members. For instance, as you may know, UDW had to fight the Board of Supervisors for a year and a half to get a 25 cent an hour increase in San Diego County. Fortunately, the new contract also created a Union Health Care Trust Fund which is funded by the Public Authority but administered by UDW. This means that, for the first time, our union will have the opportunity to obtain the best possible health benefits and work towards more affordable premium co-pays.

    There are many counties where the providers are not as fortunate as they are in San Diego. For instance, the Fresno County Board of Directors just voted to cut providers’ pay to minimum wage: $8 an hour.

    You can be sure, Maria, that we in UDW will continue to do all we can to maintain and improve wages and benefits for homecare providers in all of our counties. Thanks for your continued support.