Benton-Franklin Health District
Our nearly 60 members at the Benton-Franklin Health District help the Tri-Cities community and beyond in Central Washington.
Current Contract
Chapter Officers
2023-2025
- Co-President
Michael Le Clair - Co-President
Brandi Williams - Vice-President
Pernell Hodges - Secretary/Treasurer
Keenan McNally
Stewards
REC Delegates
Union Rep
Your Leadership Team!
Your union leadership team at BFHD are (left to right): Lars Richins (REC Delegate), Emerson Bevington (REC Alternate), Angeles Ize (Labor Council Delegate), Bethany Hickey (Vice President), Jessica Garcia (President), Britt Wilkins (Secretary), and Vanessa McCollum (Treasurer).
Benton-Franklin members fight for higher wages — and win!
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, public health workers have been working long hours in extreme conditions to keep our our communities safe. When we surveyed members at the Benton-Franklin Health District (BFHD) about what kinds of things they wanted to prioritize in contract negotiations in 2020, they were loud and clear. They wanted to see a good cost-of- living adjustment (COLA), extra pay for bilingual workers, and an acknowledgment of their hard work.
The PROTEC17 bargaining team hosted several virtual lunchtime chapter meetings to share bargaining progress and get input on how the team should re- spond to management’s proposals. Mem- bers turned out in record numbers to these meetings. On the last day of negotiations, members also wore the color blue to show their support for the bargaining team.
When management gave a final COLA offer of 2.5% for 2021, the bargaining team pushed back. They shared stories about how workers were tired, burned out, and even quitting due to the stress of working through the pandemic. The management team was moved by the testimonies, and agreed to go to the Board of Health to ask for a higher COLA for their employees. The Board voted overwhelmingly to give PROTEC17 employees a 3% COLA for 2021 and a guaranteed 1-to-2% COLA for 2022. Non-represented employees only received 2.5% for 2021. Additionally, the team won a seat at the table to decide on a policy for extra pay for bilingual workers, and they successfully fought back a proposal to split off some supervisory employees into another unit.
In a year when many workers around the state lost their jobs, were forced to take furloughs, or received no COLA, Benton-Franklin Health District members banded together and used the power of their union to fight for more.