What A Day - Kaiser Mental Health Care Workers Strike For Change
Episode Date: August 29, 2022The Justice Department released the affidavit that led to the FBI search on former President Donald Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago. Although the document was heavily redacted, it does indicate that Trum...p had highly classified information about sensitive intelligence gathering, and that the FBI had reason to believe he was trying to obstruct the investigation into those records.Over 2,000 Kaiser Permanente mental health workers in Northern California remain on strike. Today marks their 15th day since taking to the picket lines to protest huge caseloads and long wait times for their patients. Alexis Petrakis, a Kaiser therapist who’s on strike in the San Francisco Bay Area, tells us what changes she and her colleagues want to see from the health care giant.And in headlines: flash floods and landslides in Pakistan have killed over 1,000 people since mid-June, deadly fighting broke out in Libya between two rival militias, and NASA plans to launch its most powerful rocket yet to the moon.Show Notes:National Union of Healthcare Workers: Kaiser Strike – https://nuhw.org/kaiser-dont-deny/kaiser-strike/2022 Pakistan Floods Fundraisers (compiled by Ayisha Siddiqa): https://t.co/yCF1NcXah2Vote Save America: Fuck Bans Action Plan – https://votesaveamerica.com/roe/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
it's monday august 29th i'm travelle anderson and i'm priyanka arabindi and this is what a day
where we'll be honoring serena williams's last u.s open by competing against each other to become
the two greatest podcasters in the history of podcasting priyanka in this scenario you're my
sister and our sibling rivalry will propel us to greatness.
Or it'll absolutely blow up this podcast. Stick around to find out.
On today's show, officials in Pakistan are blaming climate change for deadly flooding in the country.
Plus, NASA is gearing up for its first mission to the moon in decades.
Oh, yes. Some unfinished business out there, apparently.
You know. But first, if you were with us for Friday's show, you heard that we were expecting the Justice Department
to release the affidavit that justified the FBI search on former President Donald Trump's home
at Mar-a-Lago. It is now Monday. So, Priyanka, what have we learned so far? As we were anticipating,
the 38-page document was heavily redacted.
At least half of it was covered in black bars.
But what wasn't inked out does indicate that Trump had highly classified information about intelligence gathering
and that the FBI had reason to believe that he was trying to obstruct the investigation into those records.
Okay, let's cut straight to the good stuff.
What are the biggest takeaways
here? No, I'm with you and definitely have a few things to share. So the biggest takeaway is that
the Mar-a-Lago search was brought on by the discovery that Trump kept a ton of highly
classified material at Mar-a-Lago, including documents related to the use of, quote,
clandestine human sources in intelligence gatherings. So in other words,
this is information and documents that were related to American spies abroad and foreign
nationals who spy on behalf of our government. So this information came from the documents that
the National Archives got from Mar-a-Lago back in January. And it really solidifies the fact that
this isn't like a random search or that they were going off of a hunch here. Like they actually had
really detailed information about what Trump had at Mar-a-Lago and why it would be a national security concern.
So portions of the affidavit also described the DOJ's efforts over months to try and recover
these state documents that Trump basically took with him, treated like his own personal property,
in an effort that Trump may have even illegally obstructed. So the affidavit itself states that there was, quote,
probable cause to believe that evidence of obstruction will be found at Mar-a-Lago.
So not sounding great.
And this isn't an official part of the affidavit,
but it's something that I found interesting.
A memo that basically justifies the redactions also says that there are, quote,
a significant number of civilian witnesses who are cooperating with this investigation.
So as we've said, the redactions were made in the first place to protect quote, a significant number of civilian witnesses who are cooperating with this investigation.
So as we've said, the redactions were made in the first place to protect these witnesses' safety and this ongoing investigation.
But very interesting to know that there are several people working with them on this.
Absolutely.
That's also good to hear that people are, you know, perhaps finally tired of his foolishness.
Happy it's happening.
Absolutely.
So what happens next here?
So this affidavit, it wasn't unsealed to help the case or move anything along.
It was really more for our benefits because the public wanted to know, you know, why this search was happening.
What was the justification behind it?
They really kind of did this for us.
So it's tough to say on their end, you know, what's going to happen next or when.
This really wasn't part of the equation in moving that along.
But this has set off action in other areas.
So on Friday, the director of national intelligence, Avril Haines, told lawmakers that her office will evaluate whether having all of this stuff at Mar-a-Lago was a national security risk.
Like, you know, if any unauthorized people had access to this information, that kind of thing.
No one has ever accused me of being an intelligence official, but I feel like I can tell you already, if any unauthorized people had access to this information, that kind of thing. No one
has ever accused me of being an intelligence official, but I feel like I can tell you already,
probably not a great thing. The Senate Intelligence Committee has also asked for a damage assessment.
That is Democratic Senator Mark Warner and Republican Senator Marco Rubio, who both lead
the panel. They signed on to that request, so bipartisan support there. And they want to access
the documents that were
taken from Mar-a-Lago as well. We'll obviously, you know, keep you updated as we learn more,
but that's, you know, all we have on this story for now. All right, the story that keeps on
giving there. Right. Let's turn now to another story we've been following this month.
When mental health care is under attack, what do we do?
Stand up, fight back! I said, what do we do? Stand up, fight back! More than 2,000 Kaiser Permanente
mental health workers in Northern California remain on strike. Today marks their 15th day
since taking to the picket lines, and they're now joined by dozens of colleagues who also work for
the non-profit health care network in Hawaii. Yeah, so this has been going on for some time now. So can you tell us a little more about,
you know, who these workers are and why they are striking?
Yeah, so we're talking about a huge range of professionals who do that hard work of providing
personalized care to patients one-on-one, face-to-face, or even, you know, in this era,
Zoom to Zoom. We're talking about therapists, psychologists, addiction counselors, and even social workers.
And they're striking because they're overwhelmed by huge caseloads that they just can't handle.
According to the National Union of Healthcare Workers, that's the union representing these
folks, there's only one full-time Kaiser mental health clinician for every 2,600 patients in Northern California.
Okay, yikes. That is not sounding great. So how is this affecting the people who are seeking help?
Well, so it's resulted in massive delays for appointments. Some patients are forced to wait
two to three months just to see someone for the very first time. And it's actually against
California state law to delay care. So officials have
launched two separate investigations in the past year alone about these long wait times.
It's completely understandable if you're having a mental health crisis or you are in need of
seeing somebody. It's usually not something that can wait for too long, let alone two to three
months. So how has Kaiser been reacting to all of this? Have they had meetings to negotiate
with these workers? Have they acknowledged their demands at all? What's going on over here?
Not really. As of our recording, the union has not come to an agreement with Kaiser and the union
hasn't put a stop date to the strike. So it's still open ended until they reach a deal. So
yesterday I spoke to Alexis Petrakis. She's been a therapist at Kaiser for three years now and works with both
children and families in the San Francisco Bay Area. I started by asking Alexis why she and her
colleagues made the difficult decision to strike in the first place. It's really kind of the last
resort, but we felt like this point we are left with no other option. Kaiser in bargaining this
past year has really shown a lack of commitment to reforming
their mental health care system in a way that provides improvements in patient care and
access to services, as well as retaining their current therapists or even recruiting new
therapists.
They are not currently even able to meet regulatory laws around access to care.
We felt like it was necessary to take this step so that
we can get our patients the care that they desperately need and deserve. I know that
patient wait times has been a huge issue here. As a mental health care professional,
how do these long waiting periods impact people who are trying to get the help that they need? Oh, it's so painful to see. And I had kind of heard the reputation before I started at Kaiser
that there were long waits in between return appointments, your sessions were spaced out.
I naively thought, well, that must just be for the adult therapy, right? Because adults can maybe,
you know, attend the groups and they can kind of hold it together in between.
They would never do that to children, right? But they do. And there'll be waits between like four weeks, six weeks. At my
worst, I was booking eight weeks in between appointments. The impact is either people get
worse and they reach out to you desperately by email or phone in between appointments. And you're
trying to kind of provide care in these, you know,
like a quick phone call or trying to, by email, provide resources, or they just don't get better.
And extended suffering is unacceptable. The medical oath around, you know, do no harm
really starts to come into play when you're just seeing people suffer for extended periods of time.
Yeah. I'm wondering how would you respond to,
you know, the folks, the critics out there who say that like going on strike, right,
might actually be doing more harm than good for the patients. How do you kind of reconcile that
for yourself? That is the crux of the most painful part of this for me. And I know for
most of my colleagues and what I come home to is that they have been subject to unnecessary, unethical, and
unconscionable harm before this strike.
The harm that's been going on for over 10 years.
We need to call it what it is.
It was a crisis before the strike.
It was a crisis before the pandemic.
And the pandemic really escalated it to a level of the acuity
and the intensity and the need just went sky high. I refuse to return to a system of care that
continues to harm my patients. And Kaiser, these are their patients right now, and they need to
take responsibility for them and make the change that's needed. Yeah. Now, just before the strike
kicked off, Kaiser said that your union was, quote, exploiting current challenges
as a bargaining tactic. And according to the Sacramento Bee, the network appears to be kind
of bracing for a long fight, at least three months from the looks of it. And Kaiser is reportedly
offering big signing bonuses to outside providers to kind of make good on its legal obligation to
get people the care they need. I'm wondering for you,
what does that tell you about where you all stand in negotiations right now that these are the
decisions that Kaiser is taking? What that says to me is that they're scared and they're putting
false ideas out into the media and out into the community. there is not capacity in the community to handle the caseloads of over
2,000 therapists. There is not capacity in the clinics of the managers and if they get scab
therapists to come in. We were already hemorrhaging therapists. We lost 17% of our union membership in
the last year. That's extraordinary. They're speaking as if there is capacity out there that
just somehow was untapped and now they can pull in on it. And to the point around us capitalizing
on these circumstances, that is disrespectful. And I'm so committed and passionate about the
work that we do and doing it in a way that is in alignment with the standards of care
in the field of psychology.
And I hope that this can activate them to come back to the table and be committed to making change in the mental health care services here. And I think they have this unique opportunity
because they have so much financial resources, as well as organizational structure and resources.
They have this opportunity to be a leader in the field
and even set the tone and the model,
hopefully for the nation,
because I know that these issues
are touching everyone's lives in our country.
I wonder, like, what are some of those, like,
specific changes that you and your colleagues
would like to see Kaiser kind of take on in this moment?
So really to be able to build a system
that can meet people as frequently
as they need to be seen,
we need more therapists.
We need to be able to retain the therapists
that we do have.
And we need to be able to have time
to do the indirect patient care.
And so that's not the face-to-face time, right?
The individual 50 minute hour.
It's the phone call to the parent
to make sure that they're on the same page. It's the phone call to the parent to make sure that they're
on the same page. It's the consultation with the teacher. It's a consultation with maybe a primary
care doctor, all these things that really help us make sure that we understand and we're all on the
same page with this child or this patient's entire treatment team, which includes at home and at
school. Do you personally, do you as a collective
see the strike going on for that long, for months, which it seems Kaiser is prepping for? And if so,
how are you all kind of gearing up to sustain throughout that period of time?
I do not see it lasting that long. I have already heard wind from the clinics that it's very
stressful, it's very chaotic. They're putting out these calls
to the community therapists with these $10,000 signing bonuses and all this kind of stuff.
I have a lot of friends in the community as well, and they wouldn't take that offer.
They also don't have the capacity for it. So I don't think Kaiser can sustain three months.
In terms of us preparing, I mean, what we're doing is we're talking to folks like you and
really getting our message out there.
So to get the word out of what's happening and the patients are coming forward.
I mean, I'm humbled by the bravery and the vulnerability that these patients are showing by saying, you know what?
I'm a victim of this system and I refuse to just accept it silently. We'll put a link to the National Union of Healthcare Workers website in our show notes
where you can find more information
about how to support mental health care workers
like Alexis.
And that is the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Now let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Officials in Pakistan yesterday said the country's monsoon season this year has triggered flash floods and landslides that have killed over 1,000 people since mid-June. The devastation has also left at least another 1,500 people hurt
and destroyed nearly 300,000 homes. We know we're throwing a lot of numbers at you, but that means
one in seven Pakistanis have been affected by these floods, which is not good news by any means.
Authorities are calling the amount of rainfall unprecedented, so this is yet another place that's impacted by climate change.
And to make matters worse, the monsoon rains should have stopped a month ago, and experts worry that the peak has yet to come.
We will link to some resources in our show notes for where you can donate to relieve efforts.
Listen, that is terrifying. This has already affected so many people, and the worst is yet to come here.
So, just terrifying.
Deadly fighting broke out in Libya over the weekend between two rival militias seeking
government power.
Authorities in the capital Tripoli said yesterday that 32 people died and over 150 were wounded.
Shelling hit hospitals and medical centers, making it difficult for ambulances and health
workers to aid civilians.
And this is the worst turbulence the country has seen in two years.
Health officials are urging both sides to come to a truce
and are already working to evacuate people who may be affected if the fighting intensifies.
Good luck and have a safe flight, NASA.
The agency plans to launch its most powerful rocket to date, Artemis I, to the moon today. The rocket will send
an unmanned space capsule on a 42-day trip around the moon before it eventually splashes back down
to Earth. We don't want to add stress to the situation here, but this is kind of a make or
break moment. If successful, it'll show that NASA can compete with billionaires like Jeff Bezos and
Elon Musk, who have turned space into another arena to dominate
because they were getting bored of dominating our country's people tax code and labor laws.
Not to mention, this is NASA's first mission to the moon in 50 years.
If all goes according to plan,
a future Artemis mission will carry astronauts to the moon in 2024.
This whole headline is like bananas to me.
Like if NASA can compete with these random billionaires, like excuse me, what?
How did we get here?
What is this world?
Yeah.
Also headed to the stars but on a separate flight are the ashes of Star Trek's Nichelle Nichols.
Nichols passed away last month at 89 and it has been announced that her remains will travel hundreds of millions of miles into space
aboard one private spaceflight company's
so-called Enterprise flight,
which will also carry the ashes of Star Trek's creator,
Gene Roddenberry, among others.
The launch is scheduled for later this year,
and apparently you can still reserve a spot on board
for about $12,500
if you think your deceased loved one
would want aliens at their funeral.
You know, I've heard that funerals are very expensive these days.
And so maybe $12,500 actually isn't that hefty of a price tag.
I'm just trying to wrap my head around that this flight seems to be occupied only by
dead people's ashes.
Like there seem to be no actual people. I don't
know. Wild.
The new big name
in labor organizing is
Mr. Pibb because the Chipotle
just unionized for the first
time. Last week, workers at the Chipotle
in Lansing, Michigan voted
11 to 3 to join the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters amid
a labor shortage that's taken power away from management.
Staff cited low wages and underscheduling as reasons for the collective action.
Chipotle corporate likely would have preferred to refry all the employees that were standing together as proud, intact beans.
Last month, the company unceremoniously closed one location in Maine that was preparing for its own union election.
Okay, listen, Chipotle, not cool, not cool behavior.
Between Mr. Pibb, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, there's a lot going on in this headline that I'm like trying to wrap my brain around, aside from Chipotle being bad.
Absolutely. And in an upset in the world of smokable plants,
a new Gallup poll indicates
that smoking marijuana
is now more popular
than smoking tobacco
in the U.S.
for the first time on record.
16% of Americans
said that they had smoked marijuana
in the past week,
where only 11% said
that they had smoked
a tobacco cigarette. Compare this to week, where only 11% said that they had smoked a tobacco cigarette.
Compare this to 1969,
where only 4% of Americans polled
had said they even tried weed,
and 40% said they had smoked cigs in the past week.
All of this is a clue to President Biden
that if he wants to complete his evolution into Dark Brandon,
he should legalize pot next.
Let's get that presidential approval rating up to 420%.
I believe in you.
You know, I would just love to see Biden and Harris do a celebratory puff puff pass, you know, in the Rose Garden.
Why not?
Why not?
Yeah, I mean, for them politically, that's definitely the primary reason that we're thinking here.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing
before we go. Some exciting news.
The final episode of Another
Russia is out now.
If you haven't tuned in yet, now is
your chance to hear Zhanna recount the night
of her father's assassination and reflect
on what her father's legacy means
for present dayday Russia.
You can binge all six episodes of Another Russia right now wherever you get your podcasts.
That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
report your weed consumption accurately to a poll, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the price of space funerals like me,
what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Travelle Anderson.
And solidarity with Mr. Pibb.
Who I didn't know was still around until 25 minutes ago.
Absolutely.
Dr. Pepper found shaking in his boots.
Truly. A rivalry. Like our tennis rivalry, apparently, or a podcasting one.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance,
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto
are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein
and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.