Key facts
- Proposition 44, a ballot measure, aimed to mandate that community health clinics spend at least 90% of their budgets on patient care.
- Supporters argued the measure is necessary to ensure proper stewardship of healthcare funds, citing concerns about executive salaries and non-patient care expenses.
- Opponents warned that the measure could force clinics to cut core services, potentially leading to half of them closing.
- Negotiations involving the union leader, clinics, and the Newsom administration resulted in a tentative agreement.
- The agreement includes a template for employment contracts that would protect workers' rights to unionize.
A contentious ballot measure, Proposition 44, designed to regulate how California's community health clinics spend their publicly funded budgets, has led to a significant dispute and subsequent negotiations between clinics and a union leader.
The measure, championed by union leader Regan, would require clinics to allocate at least 90 percent of their funds towards direct patient care. Regan and his supporters argue this is crucial for ensuring that scarce healthcare dollars are prioritized for patient services, especially in the face of potential federal funding cuts. They contend that some clinics are spending less than half of their budgets on patient care, with substantial amounts going towards executive salaries, fundraising, and anti-union efforts.
Conversely, representatives for the clinics, including Silva, argue that the proposed spending threshold is unworkable and would devastate essential services. They claim that core functions such as human resources, insurance enrollment assistance, and telemedicine would be forced to be cut, or clinics would operate at a significant loss. An estimate suggests that half of the clinics could be compelled to close if the measure passes.
This conflict played out against a backdrop of broader political negotiations in California. Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas' office was involved in mediating the dispute between Regan and the clinics. Simultaneously, the Newsom administration was engaged in separate talks with Regan regarding a proposed tax on billionaires. In a related development, talks between Regan and the California Hospital Association resulted in Regan withdrawing a measure limiting hospital executive pay, in exchange for the hospitals dropping their initiative to limit union political activity.
Ultimately, a tentative agreement was reached between the clinics and the union. Under this deal, the California Primary Care Association (CPCA) would provide its member clinics with a Regan-approved employment agreement. This template is intended for use in clinics where staff wish to unionize and includes provisions that prohibit employers from discouraging union organizing and grant union representatives access to office spaces for meetings.