Subjected to the light of day, Sarah Palin doesn't look like a maverick at all.
Ronald Taylor is one of perhaps hundreds of innocent people Harris County has put in prison.
Sloppy U.S. government paperwork is putting the lives of asylum seekers at risk.
On Wednesday, March 19, at 8:52 p.m., Scott Carlson, executive director of California Alliance to Advance Nursing Home Care, was apparently in an optimistic mood.
Carlson is a former executive with the Arkansas–based nursing home chain Beverly Enterprises. And until last week he ran the Alliance, a lobbying organization that helped negotiate labor contracts that have discouraged nursing home workers from informing the press, or regulators, about poor conditions for patients.
This was achieved through a pact between nursing home chains and the two-million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the nation's largest union, which represents nurses, orderlies, and other healthcare employees. Under the pact, the union would use its clout with California Democrats to push nursing-home-industry goals such as tort reform, which would limit patients and their families' right to sue in cases of wrongful death or injury; in exchange, the chains selected facilities where the SEIU could absorb workers into union ranks. This was part of national SEIU leader Andy Stern's strategy of collaboration rather than confrontation, and included deals in Washington state, Missouri, and California designed to rapidly add to union ranks on terms attractive to employers.
But in Sept. 2005, the strategy stalled when Sal Rosselli, the leader of the SEIU's California healthcare affiliate, denounced the collaboration on moral grounds. He particularly objected to the union's failed attempt to push California legislation that would have limited patient lawsuits against nursing homes. This was "neither good policy nor politically winnable," the president of United Healthcare Workers-West (UHW-West) wrote in a memo to SEIU's Washington headquarters. "We cannot sacrifice principles such as adequate consumer protection for organizing rights."
The dispute steadily escalated until Rosselli resigned from the union's national executive committee in February, denouncing Alliance-derived labor contracts as stifling the rights of workers and patients. But Carlson saw cause for hope in this public conflict.
"Maybe [the dispute] will be finally resolved by the parent union," Carlson wrote in a March 19 e-mail to Gary Passmore, executive director of the nonprofit Congress of California Seniors, which was obtained by SF Weekly. "That would then create opportunity for all responsible stakeholders to effectively collaborate on behalf of California nursing home residents. If that occurs, I anticipate that a coalition of nursing home companies would seek to join together with stakeholder groups — such as yours — and again seek opportunity for further collaborative action."
Five days later, Carlson's wishes seemed to come true: Stern wrote to Rosselli, announcing legal preparations to take over the California affiliate and throw out its local leaders. Carlson's prescience about Stern's plans seems suspicious — as if he had inside info from his pals over at SEIU.
Carlson, for his part, said anybody familiar with internal SEIU politics could see it coming. Indeed, internal union memos, transcripts, and reports document a growing feud between Rosselli and Stern, who had sought to move thousands of nursing home employees to an affiliate more amenable to the Alliance agreement.
"More SEIU representatives than I can remember — from UHW-West, Local 6434, and SEIU International — have spoken to me about resolving the SEIU internal conflict for many years," Carlson wrote in an e-mail.
I asked Carlson whether a takeover of UHW-West by Stern would mean that negotiations with nursing home chains might be able to move forward, as his e-mail to Passmore suggests.
"No. It means only specifically what it says," he wrote in response. "I believe you have been a leading source of inaccurate news about the California Alliance to Advance Nursing Home Care. Please don't now seek to commit libel or defame me by speculating intent or new facts into my private communication with another person."
In response to my March 31 inquiry, Carlson told me he was resigning from the Alliance, effective immediately. He said this was part of a dissolution plan that had been in the works since December. While nursing home companies wait in the wings in hopes of fulfilling Carlson's March 19 prediction that they'll again "join together with stakeholder groups" in a labor alliance, the conflict within the SEIU may escalate. Union takeovers can be violent, and UHW-West has stepped up security at its facilities in the event that the national union attempts to physically take them over. Rosselli has hired political consultant Eric Jaye to devise media strategy to derail the attempt. Stern, meanwhile, is the labor movement's greatest media whiz.
The resulting coverage might baffle readers accustomed to labor-beat stories about union leaders battling against companies — not among themselves. So it's important to keep in mind that the issues at the heart of this conflict are simple and relevant to everyone. It's about your mom, your former teacher, yourself, and everyone else who will end up in a profit-driven nursing home, now that the government has all but given up on direct care for the elderly. Three years ago, Rosselli took a stand against his Washington union overseers' nationwide strategy of enticing employers rather than confronting them. And in the case of the nursing home industry, these enticements were too morally repugnant to abide.
The ordinarily drab Oakland headquarters of United Healthcare Workers-West was festively jammed last Thursday with a hundred people wearing the union's signature purple T-shirts. "Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andy Stern has got to go," they shouted 30 times in unison.