Labor Pains: Still No Deal On Bill To Assist Maui Hospital Workers
State lawmakers plan to reconvene in special session Wednesday as the governor continues talks聽with union members.
The state House and Senate agreed Monday to meet聽later this week to聽amend legislation designed聽to give聽financial help to unionized workers at two聽hospitals on Maui and one on Lanai.
Those hospitals are awaiting privatization in a deal approved by the Legislature in 2015.
A procedural聽vote is expected Wednesday. A聽final vote on the amended version of 聽could come Friday. Gov. David Ige vetoed the original measure last week, prompting lawmakers to call the special session.
Based on how things have gone so far, nothing is certain. The political maneuverings are taking place in a special session outside of the Legislature鈥檚 usual January-to-May meeting time.
Meanwhile, many聽lawmakers have less than four weeks before they face a primary vote. Most of them are not directly involved in amending the legislation, which is being handled聽by the leadership in both chambers.
There is also the labor factor at play: Public employee unions are especially powerful in Hawaii, by far one of the most unionized and Democratic Party-controlled states.
Hawaii Health Systems Corp.’s three Maui Region hospitals 鈥 Maui Memorial Medical Center, Kula Hospital and Lanai Community Hospital 鈥 are being privatized.
鈥淲e have no clue 鈥 no clue 鈥 what we need to do at this point and it鈥檚 making us look ridiculous.鈥 鈥 Sen. Donna Mercado Kim
But this is also a power struggle between the executive and legislative branches.
“We have no clue 鈥 no clue 鈥 what we need to do at this point and it鈥檚 making us look ridiculous,” Sen. Donna Mercado Kim said on the floor, before casting her vote against to extend the special session by adding another recess day Tuesday.
The House passed the resolution unanimously. The Senate voted 16-3 in favor of it.
Along with Kim, Laura Thielen and Sam Slom, the chamber’s lone Republican, voted no. Suzanne聽Chun Oakland, Donovan Dela Cruz, Will Espero, Les Ihara, Lorraine Inouye, Brian Taniguchi and Glenn Wakai voted聽“aye, with reservation.”
Lawmakers are working on an amendment to 聽that聽would allow up to $25 million in severance payments to the workers who are at risk of losing their jobs once聽the state-controlled hospitals transition聽to private control under聽.
But the amended bill聽would not provide special retirement benefits that were in the version lawmakers unanimously passed in May.
House Majority Leader Scott Saiki said Monday, during a break in the floor session, that a compromise bill was necessary to help the workers. 聽contracts are still in effect until June 2017, and the state has been negotiating with the union to settle the matter.聽
“We realize聽that the transfer聽of the hospital聽to a private聽entity is a significant move for the workers, and we are trying聽to mitigate that by providing聽some sort of relief聽to them,” said Saiki.
‘A Neutral Pathway’
Saiki聽described the bill as “a neutral pathway” that allows the state to honor its existing union contracts, but also to provide a severance benefit for those who wish to leave the state system.
UPW sued the state over the privatization, leading to the negotiations. The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday gave the state and union until July聽29 to continue their negotiations 鈥渨ith the goal of reaching a settlement.鈥
The court added, 鈥淭he parties believe that they can arrive at a settlement through their current efforts.鈥
Should a settlement be reached, Saiki said, legislation would not be necessary. But until that happens, the House and Senate will work on crafting an amended version of the bill.
Aside from Slom, Thielen and Kim, no one in the Senate or House spoke up during the floor deliberations Monday.
Some Senators Grumble
Kim said the negotiations are between union members and the governor and that聽the Legislature should stay out of it.
Lawmakers should adjourn and the governor should call them聽back into session when he’s got a deal worked out, Thielen said.
鈥淎濒l of us voted for this bill during session because we wanted to help the workers,” Slom said. “But the taxpayers have been hurt … and we聽have one labor union that seems to be holding us hostage.”
Slom said part of his frustration has been the difficulty of accessing information. He said he asked his staff to track down figures more precisely detailing the anticipated costs of the bill, but they came up empty-handed after being told, at first, that the numbers were confidential.
Meanwhile, the state’s biggest聽union, the , has threatened to file its own lawsuit against the state if a deal can鈥檛 be worked out. Of the 1,400 to 1,500 unionized employees, about 900 of them belong聽to HGEA.
The battle over SB 2077 has pitted the Ige administration against House and Senate leadership and the unions.聽
Ige said the bill he vetoed was too generous to the workers, could harm the tax-exempt status of the state Employees’ Retirement System, would cost the state as much as $60 million and deepen Hawaii’s $8.77 billion聽unfunded liability.
‘Complex Transaction’
The governor said he has not had time to review the Legislature’s proposed amendments, but added, “I think all of us really want to ensure that we can move forward to provide the best health care on Maui.”
Ige described the privatization as perhaps the “most complex transaction in the history of the state. This is the first time we’ve done it. It impacts 1,500 employees. So we are working through all of those details.”
鈥淚 think all of us really want to ensure that we can move forward to provide the best health care on Maui.鈥 鈥斅燝ov. David Ige
Ige could veto an amended bill, which could clear the Legislature聽as soon as聽Friday, or sign it and let it become law. He has 10 days to decide. If the bill is killed,聽however, it聽likely would not be revived.
For now, however, he聽expressed optimism聽in striking聽an agreement with UPW, explaining that talks had been held throughout the past weekend.
Asked about criticism from HGEA boss Randy Perreira, who essentially accused the administration of incompetence on the labor issue, Ige said he had nothing to say, except this:聽“I know Randy and I know he’s doing his job to represent his employees.聽I respect that.”
The governor said he understood how stressful the process has been on the workers, who he praised for their service.
Perreira did not have any comment, as of 5 p.m. Monday, on the latest developments regarding the Maui hospital workers.
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
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