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Home > Campaigns > Your
County Supervisors
Knowing Your Local
County Board of Supervisors
How home care workers get better pay and health benefits
2008 is an election year; find out
which supervisors support homecare providers
Your County Board of Supervisors are the authorities who ultimately decide whether home care workers get pay increases and benefits. The IHSS program is administered by the County, and United Domestic Workers must negotiate with the County for increased wages and benefits. As taxpayers and voters, we elect members of this Board, and they are therefore accountable to us. Each County usually has several districts, and each district has one supervisor who represents that district. That means as a taxpayer and a home care worker you have a particular County Supervisor who represents you, and that supervisor is an elected official.
How to contact your District Supervisor
The power of your union to get you pay raises and medical benefits is directly related to how visible home care workers and their clients are, as a voting block. That is why it is so important you are registered to vote. UDW would never call for workers to strike; instead we need your participation in these activities to compel elected leaders to recognize your importance to the community and grant you a decent wage.

It is important that home care workers and their union have a good relationship with the County Board of Supervisors. When negotiations have reached an impasse (the two sides cannot agree), it is crucial for home care workers to get involved and let the Board know why their jobs deserve a living wage, and that as public representatives the Board is accountable. There are several ways home care workers can do this: |

Workers at a
County Board of Supervisors public meeting
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The Board of Supervisors hold public meetings,
during which anyone is allowed to speak. Home care workers can attend
these meetings and speak before the Board. When home care workers appear
at the Board of Supervisor meetings, we talk to the Board about the
importance of our work, and let them know that we want them to represent
us with their decisions.
This is particularly important if your county is in the process of
bargaining for better wages.
- If you are not comfortable speaking, your attendance is still very important, and shows political interest, solidarity, and influence. Many home care workers bring their client(s) and family members - there is power in numbers! UDW gives out green T-shirts with the UDW logo to people who come to the public session of the Board, so that when the County Supervisors look in to the audience they can see how many concerned home care workers, clients, (and voters!) are present.
- We understand that it is often very difficult for home care workers to leave their clients or bring them along to attend these meetings. When it is not possible to attend in person, you can still write to your supervisor, and have a big influence with your letter. When elected officials get a letter from someone they represent, it is calculated that there are probably 500 other people out there with the same opinion who simply haven't had the time to write a letter. That is why letters are very important.
- You may also phone your County Supervisors office and ask to speak with him or her. You can tell them why your job as a home care worker is vitally important to the community and why you deserve a decent wage.
United Domestic Workers of America
County Board of Supervisor
Endorsement List
(As of May 4, 2008)
Not all districts are up for re-election at the same time
at the county level;
they are staggered. The seats that are not
up for re-election this year
will be up for re-election in 2010.
Butte County
District 1 – No Endorsement
District 4 – No Endorsement
District 5 – No Endorsement |
El Dorado County
District 1 – John
Knight
District 2 – No Endorsement
District 3 – No Endorsement |
Kern County
District 1 – John
McQuiston
District 4 – Raymond Watson
District 5 – Michael Rubio |
Merced County
District 1 – No Endorsement
District 2 – No Endorsement
District 4 – No Endorsement |
Orange County
District 1 – Dina
Nguyen
District 3 – No Endorsement |
Placer County
District 1 – No Endorsement
District 4 – No Endorsement
District 5 – Bruce Kranz |
Riverside County
District 1 – Bob Buster
District 3 – No Endorsement |
San Diego County
District 1 – No Endorsement
District 2 – No Endorsement
District 3 – No Endorsement |
San Luis Obispo County
District 1 – Harry
Ovitt
District 3 – Jerry Lenthall
District 5 – James Patterson |
Santa Barbara County
District 1 – Salud Carbajal
District 3 – No Endorsement
District 4 – No Endorsement |
Stanislaus County
District 1 – No Endorsement
District 2 – Les Weidman
District 5 – John Fantazia |
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 Registering to Vote - Why it is so important:
When you write a letter, phone, or talk to your representatives, they
can look you up to see if there is anyone in your household who is
registered to vote. Elected officials have to care about what their voters think, but
they are not nearly as responsive to the opinions of people that don't
vote. It
is because your union represents thousands of voters that they will
listen to the union and grant wage increases as well as job protection.
So make sure you are registered to vote, and/or other members of your
household are registered:
You may call us at UDW and we will send you the voter registration form:
(800) 621-5016 Toll Free
Or you may go to this website: On-line Voter Registration
Change the world by voting...it really does matter!
County Board of Supervisors Public Meetings
These meetings are held once a week (on Tuesdays) at your County Offices. To find specific information for your county, (and a link to your County Supervisors web page), go to your individual county page on our website.
During the public meetings, there is usually a portion of time allotted to items that are scheduled on the agenda, and a portion of time allotted for the public to speak. Speakers during the public sessions must fill out a registration card and limit their comments (usually to two, or three minutes - depending on the county). The schedule and agenda are customarily posted at county offices as well as the Board of Supervisors web page, which is also where you will find information about the the specific Supervisor that represents your district.
Home care workers who are willing to speak at the public session can be a very powerful influence. Clients of home care services (disabled or elderly recipients of IHSS) are equally important in their impact.
See sample presentations:
Client speaks about why workers need better pay
Worker speaks about stalled negotiations
Home care worker about the recent AFSCME administration of UDW
Contacting your County Supervisor
Every county has their own web page that lists the supervisors for that county. To find out who your Supervisor is and to get their name, address, and phone number. Go to the page on this website for Your County. Once you are on your individual county page, use the "Quick Links" at the top of the page (Your County Board of Supervisors) or scroll to the section for the Board of Supervisors. There you will find a link to your County Board of Supervisors web page, as well as more information for your local area.
Personal letters and phone calls to your District Supervisor are very important.
Letters:
If you write a letter, you can address the letter to your personal supervisor or mail it to the entire Board. Remember, when elected officials get a letter from someone they represent, it is calculated that there are probably 500 other people out there with the same opinion. Your personal letter is very important. The following are sample letters. Your letter can be as simple as the first two examples, and still be very effective:
Dear County Supervisor,
Please support pay raises and health care benefits for home care workers. It is very important to me because I would like to be able to continue doing this work and I have to be able to survive on the wages.
Thank You.
Sincerely,
(Your Name and Address)
***************************
(put your county name) County Board of Supervisors;
As my representatives for this County, I am asking you to please give home care workers a living wage and medical benefits. We work hard, help the community, and can not survive on $X.XX (put the wage you make) with no medical coverage when we get sick.
Thank you.
Sincerely, (Your Name and Address)
***************************
Dear Supervisor (put your supervisor's name here),
My name is (put your name here), and I am from (put your city here).
I am a home care worker, which means I take care of my neighbor (put your client's name here) in her home, through the IHSS program. I am writing you because I want you to know how important home care workers are to this community.
I help keep (client's name) from having to live in an institution. She gets better care from me than if she was in one of those places. Without help from a home care worker like me, people like (client's name) would cost the government at least three times what it costs to pay a home care worker and she has a much better life in her own home.
Because I care deeply for my client I am able to help in ways that would not be provided in an institution but I have to support myself as well. Please help us by recognizing home care work as a job - not welfare. We need a living wage, and medical benefits so that we can go to a doctor if we get sick. These things are so important. Home care workers are contributors to society, and not everyone is willing or able to do this work. We should be respected. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Name
Address - (Address and zip code are important)
Read other letters from Home Care Workers
Phone Calls:
When you call your local County Supervisors office (how to get the phone number), be sure to tell them your name and what city you live in so they know they represent you. It helps if you are registered to vote, and you can tell them that. If you are not registered to vote your call is still important. Just leave that part out from the example below:
Hello, my name is XXX and I am a registered voter from XXXX. I am calling your office because I am a home care worker and would like you to know how important your support is for home care workers. We do a very difficult job, one that is important for this community. Not everyone is able to do this kind of work and it saves the County and the State a lot of money to be able to hire workers in the home to keep people out of institutions. Please help us by recognizing home care work as a job - not welfare. We need a living wage, and medical benefits so that we can go to a doctor if we get sick. Please support us in our negotiations with the County. Thank you very much for your time.
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