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Grassroots organizing & public policy innovation for a just economy

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Working Partnerships USA

Right of recall for workers advances to the Senate

Despite a massive corporate lobbying effort to kill the bill without a vote, yesterday the California Senate Labor Committee voted YES on AB 3216!

Because of your calls and emails, the “right of recall” for workers in sectors most impacted by COVID-19 now advances to a vote in the full Senate. Email your senator today to keep up the momentum on AB 3216.

The right of recall protections in AB 3216 are essential to ensure equity for workers of all ages, ethnicities, origins, and family status as we all strive together to recover from this pandemic. Our state must protect those who have lost work during this public health pandemic so we can all come back strong and healthy.

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AB 3216 needs a Senate hearing

We are all stronger when everyone has what we need to care for ourselves and our loved ones during this pandemic.

But as Governor Newsom emphasized yesterday, Californians are grappling with huge disparities in access to paid sick leave, forcing far too many people to choose between losing their jobs or going to work when they are sick.

AB 3216 would address these disparties by providing universal paid sick leave and job protection during a public health emergency. It passed the State Assembly with a groundswell of worker and community support.

Now we need Senator Jerry Hill to commit to give AB 3216 a hearing in the Senate Labor Committee. If he doesn’t, the bill could die without ever getting a vote.

No worker should have to choose between paying their bills or taking care of a loved one. Our state must protect those who have lost work during this public health crisis so we can all come back strong and healthy.

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Can new technology improve healthcare for patients and workers?

COVID-19 has made so clear that healthcare workers — whether janitors, nursing assistants, registered nurses, or doctors — play a critical role in our society and economy.

Yet even as these people risk their lives to keep us healthy, they are facing major changes in their jobs as hospitals and healthcare companies introduce new technology.

Today, we’re releasing a new report with the UC Berkeley Labor Center exploring how technology — video-conference doctors visits, robots that deliver supplies and clean rooms, machine learning algorithms, and many more — could affect both the kind of care patients receive and the lives of people working in the healthcare industry.

This transformation, which is being accelerated in many ways by the COVID-19 pandemic, presents an important choice: will we allow the introduction of new technologies to undermine the quality of healthcare jobs, leaving the strengths of healthcare workers underutilized and patients underserved? Or will organizers and policymakers seize this opportunity to create better outcomes for patients, workers, and communities?

The report, written by Cornell professor Adam Seth Litwin, finds that the technologies most likely to be adopted in healthcare are unlikely to reduce the demand for healthcare jobs, but how those technologies are deployed will have significant impacts for both patients and healthcare workers:

  • If we continue along the current default path — where decisions about technology are largely made by developers and hospital administrators — the healthcare industry will fail to recognize the full value that workers such as nursing assistants, orderlies, home health aides, and personal care attendants can bring. People will be asked to fill in the gaps of what technology cannot do, and both workers and patients will suffer as a result.
  • Instead, we should start by asking “what are humans uniquely capable of?” and use technology to help them excel at those skills. This work-centered approach prioritizes technological change that supports skill development and improves job quality for healthcare workers. The result? High-quality, career-building jobs for healthcare workers, reduced healthcare costs, and improved access and quality of care for patients.

This research follows our previous studies looking at other sectors that are likely to be impacted by technological change: in warehouses and in trucking.

Across industries, we are starting to see a similar trend: robots and technology will not take all our jobs, but they have the potential to significantly impact the quality of jobs, particularly for low-wage workers of color.

Healthcare is one of the largest and fastest growing parts of our economy, employing 18 million people. Black and Latinx workers and women are overrepresented in these positions like nursing assistants, orderlies, home health aides, and personal care attendants, which continue to be paid low wages despite filling essential roles. And compared to other sectors, healthcare workers are more likely to have the collective voice in their jobs that comes with being members of a union.

With the right steps by policymakers, advocates, and organized workers, healthcare can thus set an important high-road model for the future of work — one where Black and Brown people and women are employed in quality, career-building jobs that play to their strengths as they continue to provide essential care.

COVID-19 has shown how brave and dedicated healthcare workers are. As both advocates and patients, we want them providing the care and human connection you’ll never get from a robot.

The well-being of healthcare workers is deeply tied to the welfare of us all. In this time of intense change, we must rally together to shape decisions that will benefit workers, patients, and communities.

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AB 3216 passes the Assembly

California Assembly members just took a key step forward for working families by voting YES on AB 3216 – strengthening paid sick leave, family leave, and right of recall for workers most impacted by COVID-19.

We are all stronger when everyone has what we need to care for ourselves and our loved ones during this pandemic and beyond. And thanks to your calls and emails, our legislators heard our collective demand to #ProtectAllWorkers with these essential protections.

Thanks to your support, we are on our way to a healthier and more equitable recovery for California’s working families. But our fight doesn’t end today. The next step in this bill’s journey is the State Senate – with votes starting as soon as July.

No worker should have to choose between paying their bills or taking care of a loved one. Our state must protect those who have lost work during this public health pandemic so we can all come back strong and healthy.

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Paid sick days & workplace protections for all Californians

Our whole community is strongest when everyone has what they need to be healthy and safe.

But too many working Californians have faced devastating losses without recourse or protections to ensure they can care for their families and come back strong.

The California Assembly is voting now on a bill to strengthen worker protections. The bill, AB 3216 (Kalra), empowers working Californians to protect ourselves, care and provide for our families, and stay home if we are sick. AB 3216 includes three critical worker protections:

  • Statewide emergency paid sick leave for all working people;
  • Expanded access and job protections for family leave; and
  • Right of recall for laid-off workers in industries heavily impacted by COVID-19.

All working people need to be able to stay home if we are sick, to care for our family members without fear of being fired, and to have the right to return to our jobs once businesses re-open. AB 3216 addresses the urgent need for California to recover from COVID-19, prevent recurring outbreaks that could devastate our communities and small businesses, and move toward economic recovery.

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Statement on the murder of George Floyd

Artwork by Shirien

Our hearts are heavy with grief and rage at the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police this week.

We stand in solidarity with George Floyd’s family, and with Black communities, organizers and leaders both in Minnesota and around the country who are demanding justice in his name.

George Floyd’s murder reminds us of the painful truth that white supremacy and anti-Black racism remain the most dangerous and virulent pandemics in this country since its founding. They shape the patterns of power, health, and wealth that our communities are experiencing daily and that COVID-19 has only sharpened. And eradicating these forces from our institutions and systems must be at the center of all of our movements for justice.

Because none of us are free until all of us are free. And we cannot win a just economy, inclusive democracy, or dignity, safety, and power for working families if our Black loved ones, family, friends, and neighbors cannot walk down the street, drive in their cars, or simply EXIST without fear of being killed.

We join the call for a thorough and transparent investigation into George Floyd’s death and for the officers involved to be brought to justice for the murder they committed. But we know arrests alone are not enough, as long as our systems are defined and maintained by those who hold wealth and power and treat corporate property and profit in higher regard than Black lives.

It is up to all of us to confront these forces in our lives and to work together to build new systems that value, cherish, and protect Black lives at the center. We believe in a world where Black people can live and love fully, pursue their dreams, care for their families, and shape and build power in their workplaces and communities without fear. We stand with Black community organizers and leaders here in the Bay Area and around the country who are charting the path forward. And we are committed to channeling the collective power of our community-labor coalition in support of transformative change to ensure safety, health, and freedom for our Black loved ones and neighbors.

We encourage our communities and networks to donate to the below organizations:

  • Black Visions Collective
  • Reclaim the Block
  • M4BL Rapid Response fund
  • George Floyd’s family memorial fund
  • Bail funds in cities across the US

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workingpartnershipsusa

Get Flock out of San José! Earlier this week, the Get Flock out of San José!

Earlier this week, the community showed up at San José City Hall and spoke out about the dangers of Flock Safety and demanded stronger protections for our communities against AI mass surveillance. Neighboring cities like Mountain View, Santa Cruz, and even Santa Clara County have already terminated contracts with Flock Safety’s vulnerable surveillance systems. In response to this, the City Council unanimously voted to strengthen guardrails on the technology—but the work to protect our privacy and civil liberties is far from over.

Surveillance without accountability isn't public safety, and ALPRs are just one example of how these powerful new systems are harvesting vast amounts of our data and using AI in a regulatory void. 

Mass surveillance systems threaten our fundamental rights by enabling the tracking of residents without meaningful oversight, putting immigrant communities, people seeking healthcare, and community members speaking out for change at risk.
Workplace questions? You don’t have to figure it o Workplace questions? You don’t have to figure it out alone. 

The Santa Clara County Office of Labor Standards Enforcement (@sccfairwrkplace) offers a free attorney advice line for both workers and employers. Call now to get information about compliance, local and state resources, and even make legal clinic appointments!

📞 1-866-870-7725
Congratulations to these dedicated students for co Congratulations to these dedicated students for completing the Fundamentals of Construction Training as part of their enrollment in the Trades Orientation Program (TOP)!⁠
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TOP is a free, one-year program that will put you on the pathway to apprenticeship and a rewarding career in the high-demand construction trades.⁠
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👉 Visit the link in our bio to learn more! 🔗
As we end WPUSA’s 30th year, we’re also looking ah As we end WPUSA’s 30th year, we’re also looking ahead. We brought together leaders from across WPUSA’s history to share their hopes for the organization’s future—and for the movements we support.

Our 30th year is not an endpoint, but a continuation. As you watch this video, we invite you to imagine the next chapter of WPUSA—one shaped, as always, by working people coming together to demand a more just economy and a stronger democracy.

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👉 Read about what we've accomplished in 2025. Visit the link in our bio! 🔗

#WPUSA30
Silicon Valley’s tech boom generated immense wealt Silicon Valley’s tech boom generated immense wealth, but from the start, WPUSA recognized that so many workers were excluded from that prosperity.

In this video, WPUSA leaders speak about confronting the hidden costs of innovation. While tech transformed the economy; service workers, immigrants, and communities of color faced low wages, job insecurity, and displacement. Our work continues to challenge the narrative that inequality is inevitable—and insists that policy choices mattered.

As new technologies continue to reshape work, the lessons of the past 30 years remain urgent and remind us that that the future of technology is not just about what we build—but who benefits, and who has power in shaping what comes next.

#WPUSA30
As we end WPUSA’s 30th year, we’re pausing to refl As we end WPUSA’s 30th year, we’re pausing to reflect on the moment—and the movement—that gave rise to Working Partnerships USA. 

Born in a time of rapid economic change and growing inequality, WPUSA emerged from a shared conviction that working people deserved power, voice, and a real stake in shaping Silicon Valley’s future.

In this video, leaders across WPUSA’s history reflect on why the organization was created and what it was meant to do. Their stories remind us that WPUSA was never just a response to crisis—it was a proactive strategy to organize workers, influence policy, and challenge an economic model that left too many behind.

👉Watch the full Directors Video that premiered at our Champions for Change 2025 Gala. Link in bio! 🔗
🚨 Medi-Cal changes are coming Jan. 1, 2026 🚨 Cambi 🚨 Medi-Cal changes are coming Jan. 1, 2026 🚨 Cambios en Medi-Cal llegan el 1 de enero de 2026 🚨

Don’t miss this opportunity to understand the upcoming Medi-Cal enrollment freeze and how it could impact your healthcare. Hear directly from experts, get your questions answered, and learn what steps to take to stay insured.

📅 Friday, December 19, 2025
🕕 6–8 PM
📍 Zoom Webinar (RSVP required)
🔗 bit.ly/websmedical (link in bio)

Attendance will be kept confidential, personal information will not be shared, and live Spanish interpretation will be available. Join us and stay informed—we look forward to seeing you there!

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No pierda esta oportunidad de entender el próximo congelamiento de inscripciones de Medi-Cal y cómo podría afectar su atención médica. Escuche directamente a expertos, haga sus preguntas y aprenda qué pasos tomar para mantenerse asegurado/a.

📅 Viernes, 19 de diciembre de 2025
🕕 6–8 PM
📍 Seminario web por Zoom (se requiere registrarse)
🔗 bit.ly/websmedical (enlace en la biografía)

La asistencia será confidencial, no se compartirá información personal y habrá interpretación en vivo en español. ¡Acompáñenos y manténgase informado/a—esperamos verle allí!
Jennifer from our Fair Workplace Collaborative tea Jennifer from our Fair Workplace Collaborative team is asked "why is it important to know your rights?"

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The Fair Workplace Collaborative (FWC) is a coalition of dedicated community members, organizations, labor attorneys, and small business leaders committed to combating wage theft and labor violations by connecting with the community, providing free legal aid, hosting worker and business employment/labor trainings, and legal clinics.

👉Learn more about your rights as a worker in Santa Clara County by going to the link in our bio! 🔗
💬 Shape the conversation on tech justice! 💡⁠ ⁠ We' 💬 Shape the conversation on tech justice! 💡⁠
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We're living in an era where Big Tech is using AI to surveil us, control what information we see, help ICE abduct our neighbors, allow employers to cut jobs and wages, and help landlords raise the rent.⁠
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That's why @workingpartnershipsusa, @siren_immigrantrights, and @conmijente is building a movement to fight back against the tech billionaires and their ever-growing consolidation of wealth and power.⁠
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Don’t miss the chance to learn, connect, and take action alongside others fighting for justice in the age of AI!⁠
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👉 Use the link in our bio or go to wpusa.org/fightbigtech to sign up! 🔗
Everyone deserves to feel safe where they work.⁠ ⁠ Everyone deserves to feel safe where they work.⁠
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Tomorrow, Nov 12, we’re educating businesses on how to keep their workplace safe for workers and clients in the midst of rising threats from the federal government. We’ll share resources and practical steps to keep workplaces prepared, safe, and informed during federal worksite activity.⁠
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👉 Sign up using the link in our bio 🔗
🏥 Get out the vote for Healthcare!⁠ ⁠ The special 🏥 Get out the vote for Healthcare!⁠
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The special elections are next week and one measure on our ballot—Measure A—will save our local hospitals and healthcare access for EVERYONE in Santa Clara County. We need all hands on deck to safeguard our access to critical healthcare in the wake of budget cuts stripping away essential services for our community.⁠
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Voting YES on Measure A is a vote to provide continued funding for our ambulances, emergency rooms, cancer services, maternity health, and safety net programs. We need your help to win.⁠
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This is a critical moment. Every conversation matters. Every door knocked and phone called could be the difference.⁠
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👉 Use the link in our bio or go to wpusa.org/GOTV-MeasureA to help build the future our community deserves.
Thank you for celebrating 30 years of bold leaders Thank you for celebrating 30 years of bold leadership and shared accomplishments with us at Champions for Change 2025! 💫

This past week reminded us what true solidarity in community looks like as we faced threats of ICE and National Guard deployment in the Bay Area. Our immigrant-led groups, mutual aid networks, faith organizations, and coalitions came together to provide support, training, workshops, resources, and more. The South Bay came through, and we are so proud to be part of a community that shows up for each other.

This spirit of collective action—the same spirit that protected our neighbors this week—is what we celebrated at our 2025 Champions for Change gala. Our Champions, UNITE Here President Gwen Mills, SEIU President April Verrett, California Fast Food Workers Union Director Maria Maldonado, and non-profit law firm Adler & Colvin are paving the way for more people to join unions, mobilize, and grow the movement to make even more remarkable progress for workers, immigrant communities, and movement building across the state and our nation.

We’re incredibly grateful to everyone who made this event a success—and to everyone who has stood with us over these past 30 years. Your solidarity, energy, and belief in our shared vision make everything we do possible. Together, we’ll keep building a South Bay where every worker, every family, and every community can thrive. Here’s to the next 30 years of courage, care, and collective action. 💙

This event was beautifully captured by Alain McLaughlin.
👉  Use the link in our bio or visit our Facebook page to see the full album of photos!
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