Just as Hollywood's writers and studios reached a tentative deal to return to work after nearly 150 days, a new strike was brewing.
More than 75,000 health-care workers walked off the job Wednesday at Kaiser Permanente, the nation's largest non-profit health-care organization, driven in part by demands for higher pay in the midst of staffing shortages, which left employees burned out.
At the same time, the United Auto Workers strike is ongoing, marking three weeks since the first-ever simultaneous walk out against the Detroit Three.
In the last few months alone, striking or threatening to strike has led to a string of labor deals where UPS drivers, airline pilots and aerospace manufacturing employees have pushed for and won higher pay.
"Strikes can often be contagious."
Persons:
Johnnie Kallas, Kallas
Organizations:
Kaiser Permanente, United Auto Workers, Detroit, Finance, Cornell University's School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Labor