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By Roy Lyle

In response to a layoff of 175 employees last month, former UCI Medical Center workers and union members from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) 3299 held a town hall meeting in Humanities Hall last Thursday night to inform students about layoffs occurring at the UCI Medical Center and to ask UCI students to support them.

UCI Medical Center workers were first given notice that they would be laid off on Oct. 3 through an email from Howard Federoff, CEO of Irvine Health. Through laying off 175 employees and other cuts, Medical Center officials hope to cut costs and save tens of millions of dollars by the end of the fiscal year next June.

Organizers from AFSCME, the union that represents 68 of the 175 former service works, were critical of the layoffs, particularly in light of high salaries within UC Irvine Health’s administration and the large profit margins of the UCI Medical Center. Federoff was the focus of much of the union’s criticisms, as they cite him as having an annual base salary of $800,000. They also note that the Medical Center made $70 million in profit last year and $130 million over the last two years.

Workers at the town hall and at other actions have heavily criticized hospital officials for their large salaries, as well as for the profits, arguing that the job cuts “reflect a pattern of misplaced priorities.” They argue that the layoffs exacerbate pre-existing staffing problems at the medical center.

“For a public, tax-exempt medical system to put profits before patient care — particularly at a time of chronic understaffing and rising need from patients — is both appalling and dangerous,” said AFSCME Local 3299 President Kathryn Lybarger in a press release after the layoffs.

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[Source]: New University